The "irregular heartbeat" is merely a cause of death speculated by the medical examiner when the autopsy and toxicology and medical history offer nothing else definitive to explain it.
If they had found (sea) water in the lungs, they should have listed the cause of death as drowning.
so that means she could have been dead before she left the plane too...
As I see it, Yamamoto was holding her hand or arm while they were both near the aircraft door, by the time her photograph was taken by Puentes, she had drifted a considerable distance from the aircraft, the life-preserver was keeping her head out of the water, her hair is still dry, and she's still wearing her glasses.
So how would she have water in her lungs?
Not content with sly accusations that Yamamoto caused her death by letting go of her hand when she became unresponsive, and not-so-veiled hints that the rescue service deliberately left her at the mercy of the elements instead of attempting to revive her, now it seems there’s another potential suspect. Looks like it takes a very large group of people to do away with one obese, subsequently unhealthy old lady.
Didn’t it strike them that her demise would have been so much easier to arrange on dry land?
There are some untraceable chemicals that can cause death, such as an OD of insulin.
Thanks for the ping!
Heinous Anus’ dead pool apparently has no water in it..