Dr. Kendall Crowns
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And she kept saying this over and over.
The sheriff's officers were like, what doctor are you talking about?
And she pointed out her window towards my house.
And one of the sheriff's officers looked over and noticed, sitting in my driveway, my car.
At that time, I had a very distinctive blue Mustang that I drove all the time, and all the officers knew about it.
I didn't take it to the airport when I left for obvious reasons.
And when the sheriff's officers saw that car, they knew who that son-of-a-bitch doctor was.
It was me.
And then they both thought, wait, this is the crazy neighbor that Dr. Crowns is always talking about, the one who shot at him, and the one who does all those other crazy things.
And while they were taking their notes, the neighbor's wife alleged that I had something to do with his death.
And that created the issue with the manner of death.
They had to rule out a homicide.
A suicide in which two gunshot wounds to the head occur is unusual.
In the U.S., 20,000 people die each year from gunshot wounds to the head.
There is a 5% survival with these, and 3% of those people have a good quality of life.
There are a few factors that come into play that determine if a person can have purposeful movement after they're shot in the head.
A low-speed, small bullet will fracture the skull but lose most of its energy doing that, and the resultant damage is just along the wound track.
A high-velocity bullet, on the other hand, can cause a massive wound track with a pressure wave and results in significant damage and almost always kills the individual.
It's really, truly about the velocity.
So, as always, speed kills.