Kaelyn Moore
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I had an initial thought, though, and I was like, okay, could she have had a mask on?
Could she have started this fire and gotten further enough away from it quickly enough?
Yeah, I mean, it's wild to think, like, maybe she had a mask and still was able to start it and, you know, do that.
There's also another test that could have been performed where they actually could have checked the carbon dioxide levels in the blood.
And I know a lot of you out there are like...
After the fire and the way in which she was found, like, my first thought was, like, would there even be blood in her body still, given the severity of this fire?
And yes, you can still have blood in a burned body, but...
Obviously, fire causes extreme dehydration, destroys tissues, but you can often still find fluid blood in vessels of the heart.
Even in significantly burned cases, intense heat can also cause blood to boil and create heat-induced hematomas, particularly within the skull.
So they could have potentially performed that carbon dioxide level test.
However, in all of the research I went through, I wasn't able to find out if that test was performed on Nanette.
Dr. Preston might have just seen, hey, no particular matter and been like, we're good here.
There's no signs that she was alive when this fire was started.
Right, right.
Dr. Preston did also look for signs of assault on Nanette, thinking if this was a homicide, maybe there would be more physical evidence.
But again, her remains were too badly burned to tell.
He also sent his report off to the Louisiana office of the state fire marshal and the St.
Tammany parish sheriff's department, who at this point are now both working on this case.
But he doesn't release his findings publicly yet.
Even so, one thing is now super clear.