Not true. There would be pooled blood in the corpse that would drain when the body was moved into different positions. The Foot wounds would have been insufficient to allow bleed out of the entire blood supply if the heart stopped pumping. Wounds in the arms were elevated. Blood pooled in the chest cavity separated into serous fluid and blood and would flow across the body as it was laid down on its back. The other chambers of the heart would empty. . . and the blood and serous fluid in the longs would drain from below the lance wound. Again, this has been looked at by some of the world's foremost forensic pathologists. . . and these are their findings.
He received a spear wound that is written to have caused massive fluid loss.
After that, if the corpse was laid flat on it's back on a level surface, the nose and toes would be the highest point. How in such horizontal orientation would fluids flow up and out the nasal cavity?