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The toxicology report can't confirm it because if the report is inconclusive, the coroner cannot state otherwise or else he'll face lawsuits. The pharmaceutical industry can use all sorts of technicalities to force an inconclusive report. In this case, they did.
Who are you going to believe: People with no motive or a greedy industry responsible for the 3rd leading cause of death in the U.S.?
Deaths from side effects of pharmaceutical drugs was the 3rd leading cause of death in 2007 behind cancer and diabetes. You won't hear this figure listed in the official causes of death because deaths from side effects of pharmaceutical drugs is not considered a disease or accident.
You see how data can be manipulated?
Cho was on antidepressants.
The toxicology report can't confirm it because if the report is inconclusive, the coroner cannot state otherwise or else he'll face lawsuits. The pharmaceutical industry can use all sorts of technicalities to force an inconclusive report. In this case, they did.
Who are you going to believe: People with no motive or a greedy industry responsible for the 3rd leading cause of death in the U.S.?
Deaths from side effects of pharmaceutical drugs was the 3rd leading cause of death in 2007 behind cancer and diabetes. You won't hear this figure listed in the official causes of death because deaths from side effects of pharmaceutical drugs is not considered a disease or accident.
You see how data can be manipulated?
Cho was on antidepressants.
by Sandra Kiume
June 25, 2007
Police released some details of the toxicology report from the Virginia Tech killer's body, and found no trace of any prescription, or illicit, medication. Nor were there any found in his home. Almost immediately after the shootings there were antipsychiatry activists claiming that antidepressants drove him to it, but that inflammatory rhetoric has now been disproven.
"Tod Burke, professor of criminal justice at Radford University, said the toxicology report isn't surprising, and anyone who thought the presence of drugs in Cho's blood system might somehow better explain his deadly actions was trying "to make sense out of nonsense."
"Obviously there was a problem, and it was a psychological problem," Burke said. "Even if he was on medication, his behavior still was unusual during his time at Virginia Tech. Sometimes an orange is just an orange."