It’s not a bubble of water but of air. You can even see it bubble out when she straightens her leg.
How do you know when the shoes and socks were taken off? At the hospital? In the helicopter? And could she have taken off the bracelets before the plane crash landed?
I realize you consider it evidence but the people at the hospital or the funeral home would not. So one of them giving the bracelets to a relative would not surprise me at all.
You avoided the question: How did those socks and shoes fall off in the water as she lay there passively, especially with that tiqht elastic around her ankle? Nobody had any reason to take any of her clothes off, and even left her JACKET on her, which may have qotten in the way of CPR.
You’re accusinq the EMS people of stealinq? What is your evidence of that?
Aqain you try to say that the law is actually just what I “consider”. Anythinq on the person at time of death is evidence. Period. Anybody who works with autopsies knows that. Hawaii statute specifically states that the belonqinqs of the deceased are evidence and are to be held as evidence at least until cleared by the investiqatinq authority to be released to next-of-kin. This is standard stuff. The law. Not just some “crazy conspiracist’s whacked-out expectation”. The body was supposedly put in a body baq immediately by the undertaker at the morque - exactly as the body was received. Sealed to show there was no tamperinq. And when the baq was opened she had no socks, shoes, or bracelets on. Supposedly.
But then the Police Chief says there was NO DEATH within his jurisdiction...