Richard Hirschman extracts large 'clot' from carotid artery of the deceased (May 2022).

1 year ago
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[WARNING: there is a sudden expulsion of embalming fluid when the 'clot' is removed - there is a warning in the video also]

Original: https://www.bitchute.com/video/te7KL9iWTY3T/ [8:25 to 17:09], Jane Ruby Show.

In May 2022, embalmer Richard Hirschman extracted an exceptionally large piece of the unknown strong whitish intravascular material that embalmers have been finding, from the common carotid artery of the deceased. Some of this footage was shown later on Died Suddenly. Hirschman goes into more detail here about the circumstances. Some transcript:

[2:36] I normally like to embalm from the iliac region, and so I am pushing fluid but I am having an issue with drainage and I am having an issue with distribution of fluid going through, so I opened the jugular vein - that big long angular forceps is what is in the jugular vein - and then.. I am still having an issue.. so I open the carotid artery and I am trying.. to allow.. some fluid to come out of there to see if I am getting fluid .. it should be going through there. When I first cut it open, I pulled out another clot out of the carotid artery which is not on the video but then I continued having problems and so I am having to try and open that.. [artery] up because the artery is stretchable, it is like a rubber band and his arteries were in good shape, they weren’t sclerotic.. they were pretty good for his age.

3:58 ' Yes.. if I am going into.. almost like a pipe, if you are pushing fluid in from one pipe and it branches off.. even though you are pushing fluid down there you should be getting fluid out of all these different areas.. So what happened was I wasn't getting fluid into different parts of the body and one of the main ones would be the carotid artery so I cut into the carotid artery and I am looking to see as I am pushing fluid in, is it coming out there, because if it is not coming out there, then it is not going in to the head - so as I opened that up, I am not getting enough fluid, I’m like there’s something’s wrong, something is blocking this - and that’s why I am trying to open it up to allow whatever is blocking it to come out.' [4:43]

Dr Ruby asks where it had been sitting. Hirschman mentions [5:30] the innominate (brachiocephalic) artery, which lies between the common carotid and the arch of aorta.

6:56 'Those long stringy things are, I believe, is where it branches off into the other vessels.'

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