Couple of days ago I was listening to a radio interview with a guy who's business in Los Angeles was as a "cleaner". His job was to go into apartments, private homes, and hotel rooms where a death had taken place and make things all spic 'n span. It's not the duty of the police to clean things up after a death, homicide or suicide. You do it yourself or hire someone. A lot of his jobs involved bodies that laid forgotten on floors or in chairs for months or weeks. After listening to some of the squalid conditions and smells he described in some of these homes I had to switch the interview off.
Sorry for your loss Oberon. Seems strange that OBL can get a dignified burial at sea while ordinary chaps who didn't cause any mischief die isolated and alone.
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--Mobilis in Mobili--
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