Mourtzoukou celebrates the results of Panagiotakis’ histology: I’ll go out in Amalilada and enjoy!

The final stretch is in the final stretch in the high-profile case of little Panagiotis, from Amalia, who died last August in the presence of Irini Mourtzoukou. The results of the pathology tests were handed over to the coroner, who will give the final answer by writing the conclusion.

Upon learning the results of the histology, Irini Mourtzoukou appeared on MEGA celebrating. “Wow, what is wrong with me? I’m jumping around and saying it’s a New Year’s gift. I talked to my lawyer who made sure it was pathological and I was happy. It calmed my soul,” said Irini Mourtzoukou. “Since I talked to my lawyer, I don’t care what Mr. Leo and everyone else says,” she added.

“I’m going to go out to Amalia to burn it today. I’m going to take the banners, I’m going to pull. I was dancing, it fell and I made vows here. Now I will leave nothing standing,” he said.

“All this time no one believed me, now let me see who has the face to face me and say sorry. Let my mother call me now. Now I’m going to talk to her. No! I want to see who has the face to come and look me in the eye and say sorry,” Irini Mourtzoukou said.

According to Irini, she contacted Panagiotis’ mother after the leak of the histological tests. “I got the ‘okay’ from Poppy for certain people, I will move on and I don’t care about anything from there,” she said.

“The father had the child”

For her part, Poppy said Panagiotakis was with his father and she did not know if he had presented any problems: “The father had the child. Now if he did something to the father and didn’t tell me, I don’t know. However, when he brought me the child he was fine.”

In response to a question about whether she recalled the previous days registering any difficulty in communicating with the child, such as not responding, she replied. As long as I had the child he was fine, if 3-4 days before when his father had taken him away Panagiotakis had done something and didn’t tell me, I don’t know. The child hadn’t created anything for me. Days before he hadn’t done anything to me. The night before when I had left, when I had been taken away by that friend of mine, he only told me that he had vomited once.”

Panagiotakis’ grandmother, Fotini, intervened in the conversation, saying: “Do you remember when I was beating myself up and saying: and how do I know if the father had put his hand in that he had taken him 2-3 days before and then made me sick after the child. I was sure and I said that Saki had done something, he had taken it 3 days earlier. I was shouting that, but no one would listen to me.”

“I’ve never heard a forensic pathologist say a pathological finding”

“When we talk about multi-organ failure it means that some organs are affected and this is recorded. There is no such record. Ms Demetriadou talked about the cenotopic degeneration of liver cells. In this particular case, no communication is needed to interpret it because it is interpreted by the people who saw it under the microscope. And they are talking about hypoxia and ischemia. Here are the findings. We have the liver with hypoxia-ischemia. The brain had the same interpretation by the same people. So what’s the bottom line? To understand the reason why the little boy lost his oxygen,” Gregory Leo said for his part.

“Is there a doctor who believes that for example from a mucous membrane of the intestine oxygen drops in a human being? It was also received that the intestine was in decay. That is, from the moment the child died and ended up in the morgue there was sepsis,” he continued.

“I want to hear from a coroner. So far I have not heard a coroner say ‘Here I have a pathological finding’. To say theoretically about an infection… Is there an infection? Did the pathologists see an infection and not write it down? We’re waiting on the tox screen. There’s certainly no pathological cause that would explain the lack of oxygen. (…). We will get to the cause and mechanism of death,” he concluded.

 

The post Mourtzoukou celebrates the results of Panagiotakis’ histology: I’ll go out in Amalilada and enjoy! appeared first on ProtoThema English.

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