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-   -   May 7, 2009: Two Faced -first American face transplant (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=20237)

monster 05-07-2009 09:12 PM

May 7, 2009: Two Faced -first American face transplant
 
http://cellar.org/2009/facetransplant1.jpg

http://cellar.org/2009/facetransplant2.jpg

Connie Culp was shot in the face by her husband five years ago. She lost her nose and needed a trach tube to eat and breathe. Now she has a nose again, thanks to a donor. I suspect 10/20 years ago I might have though research into face transplants was cosmetic/frivolous. This definitely proves otherwise. It's a very beautiful thing, if not in the traditional sense. pics are before/after and way back when....

(BBC story)

toranokaze 05-07-2009 09:30 PM

She is a reverse Jackson, she used plastic surgery to get a nose

ZenGum 05-07-2009 10:19 PM

Who did you think the donor was???

SPUCK 05-08-2009 04:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZenGum (Post 563693)
Who did you think the donor was???

That lady's head that Arnold used to sneak into Mars.. (I have Total Recall of it)

DanaC 05-08-2009 04:41 AM

The initial transplant involves adding much more skin than is actually needed (in case of tissue rejection I think it said) at a later stage, they will cut away excess and round off her face. That's not the shape it will stay.

Look at her picture before she was shot. She was such a bonny lass. Apparently her husband also shot himself and survived. He's serving 7 years.

Medic63 05-08-2009 05:21 AM

He only got 7 years? That, in itself, is a crime. :(

DanaC 05-08-2009 06:25 AM

My gut reaction was exactly the same as yours medic. But I don't know the circumstances around it. Maybe there was a case for diminished responsibility? If not, then really, it's a very low sentence.

capnhowdy 05-08-2009 07:17 AM

Basically the same time he'd serve had he killed her.

glatt 05-08-2009 07:23 AM

I read elsewhere that she forgave him and testified on his behalf to reduce the sentence.

Shawnee123 05-08-2009 07:40 AM

I can forgive a whole hell of a lot, and have. I don't know that I could forgive someone who did that to me. What a nightmare, can you imagine? I can't. Every day you look in the mirror and it's YOU looking back...until it's not.

I saw her on a news conference, briefly. She has more inner strength than I could dream of.

DanaC 05-08-2009 07:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by capnhowdy (Post 563749)
Basically the same time he'd serve had he killed her.

Oh. Oh, well in that case, that seems a fair sentence.

Sundae 05-08-2009 08:03 AM

Men tend to get off more lightly than women in cases of spousal abuse/ violence.
Judges still operate under the perception that women aren't natuarally inclined to violence, therefore a crime perpetrated by a woman against a man is more heinous.

Not relevant in this case of course. It just bears repeating every now and then.

classicman 05-08-2009 09:33 AM

I disagree - repeating that is not helping, do you have any statistics on that? Not being argumentative, but I think that almost the opposite is the more common belief.

nikimac 05-08-2009 09:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SPUCK (Post 563722)
That lady's head that Arnold used to sneak into Mars.. (I have Total Recall of it)

I knew I recognized that triangle face from somewhere!

DanaC 05-08-2009 09:54 AM

That might be the opposite of commonly held beliefs where you are Classic, but not here in the UK.

There is also another factor involved to do with preconceived murder, versus the so-called 'crime of passion'. Because women who kill abusive partners usually don't do so in an act of immediate self-defence, but rather after years of abuse, and when the partner is at his most vulnerable (and therefore the only time she will feel able to attack), they have usually faced a full murder charge. Because when men kill their wives they can usually point to an instance of rage, they have historically got away with lighter sentences. I will look for the source but there was a case, not so long ago (maybe a decade) of a judge considering it an acceptable mitigation that a man had snapped because his wife was 'nagging' him.

Our laws only recognised 'rape' as being legally possible within marriage in the mid-late '90s.

There's a similar discrepancy as well, in sentencing for child murder. Women who murder children (I don't necessarily mean their own children) will usually be seen as much greater monsters than men who do the same. Again I'll have to go digging for suorces...though actually, no i won;t not yet. I will go write my essay on factory reforms :P

Flint 05-08-2009 10:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DanaC (Post 563797)
...
I will look for the source but there was a case, not so long ago (maybe a decade) of a judge
considering it an acceptable mitigation that a man had snapped because his wife was 'nagging' him.
...

I think they made a movie about that: Empowered Man Murders Controlling Wife In Lifetime For Men Original Movie

classicman 05-08-2009 10:10 AM

HA HA HA HA AH HA Thats a great one!

Shawnee123 05-08-2009 10:17 AM

:lol2: She deserved it!

Quote:

...a fun-loving mechanic who meets a seemingly perfect woman, but must soon fight for his very life after she reveals herself to be a clingy, manipulative shrew.
Quote:

"It's about one man's perseverance against impossible odds," said director Tom Dunlop, whose previous credits include the Lifetime for Men original films Suffocated Independence and Not With My Hard-Earned Money You Won't. "Hopefully Gary's struggle will inspire other men out there to empower themselves and stand up to frigid women who attempt to micromanage every last minute of their lives."
I'm sorry, but that's just funny!

DanaC 05-08-2009 03:01 PM

lol made me giggle

Queen of the Ryche 05-08-2009 03:29 PM

The article mentioned a botched murder/suicide - Maybe it was mutually agreed upon ala Romeo and Juliet, and that is why she forgave him and the light sentence?

SPUCK 05-09-2009 04:31 AM

I believe she's a psychiatrist which may have helped her cope.. She is an amazing person no question about it.


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