” If she wasn’t wearing any lenses on the morning she died, could she even READ a bottle?? “
You’ve made a great point !
The child proof caps can sometimes be a bear to open.
Ditto the child proof cap on the liquid CH.
A bleary eyed, doped up, septic woman who less than 24 hours prior was found dazed and confused in a bathtub ( per Dr Perper ) and needs help to walk a few feet to the bathroom ( I believe Stern made that up as an alibi , she was probably well into her coma at 10 am )
is going to have the stability to walk through the rooms,
open overflowing closets, find the duffle ,unzip the duffle,
locate the CH and then have the dexterity to open the bottle. Yeah right.....
And tomorrow a big, pink bunny is going to deliver eggs.
Remember, she weighed 178 lbs.. That kind of weight carries a pretty good vibration. The chances of it being a "disturbing sound" is very great.
I think she was pretty much out of it by 10 also but I'd say the "Bathroom time" was "killer dose" time.
Same thing with Danny. "Bathroom time" was "Killer dose" time.
The time spreads are the same. Funny, they said that Danny had been dead for a while when Anna found him "not breathing".
Funny, Howard got to the dock just in time to get the phone call on front of a witness.
Lets go back: Moe left to go help his brother. A little while later, Moe calls and asks about Anna. Why??
A few minutes later, Taz calls Moe and says HELP! Moe calls Howard.
I'm speculating....It wasn't MOE that called Taz...It was Howard checking on Anna as he got to the dock (because right after is when they checked on her) and told her to call Moe because he'd be on the boat.
In other words, he wanted someone to find her "NOW" while he was away.
And that's why Howard sent Moe to the hospital with Anna and said "don't say anything until I talk to you" and grabbed Taz to "refresh her memory" and told Brigitte and Eric and unnamed friend to get out of town.
Howard later went to the hospital to spend alone time with Anna and talked to Moe at that time.
They had trouble keeping the stories straight because they were only half truths and didn' string together easily.