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Parnell's autopsy report said she had an enlarged heart, was overweight and had advanced liver disease, kidney disease, hypertension, heart disease and was a diabetic, all of which were decided to be secondary factors. Dr. Steven Dunton, the deputy chief medical examiner in Dekalb County, Ga., said an autopsy finding of natural causes can be upgraded by what he calls an external environmental factor. In Parnell's case, doctors listed her cause of death as a heart attack due to "stress during home invasion." "There's nothing seen by the pathologist that would show a person died that way," Dunton said. "That's entirely from circumstantial information." Legal experts said those circumstances will be crucial to winning a murder conviction. Prosecutors must show what Whitfield did inside Parnell's home caused her death, said Michael Tigar, a Duke University Law School professor. "Jurors very often resent what they see as overcharging," Tigar said. "They resent lawyers who claim too much for their cases. In most cases, (lawyers have) stretched the analysis or theory in order to heighten punishment, and are often penalized by the jury because of it." Parnell's family -- four children, five grandchildren and her husband of 59 years, Herman
-- support the decision to seek a murder conviction, said the family attorney, H. Monroe Whitesides. Whitfield, he said, "breaks into the house that she occupied with her husband for 59 years, and he kidnaps her and moves her to another room and she has a heart attack. And you think that this Whitfield character ... ought to be excused for that?"
[Associated
Press;
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