Down syndrome – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 07 Dec 2024 15:56:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Down syndrome – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 US Lawyer Fatally Shoots Son, Burns Body Before Telling Cops “It Was Horrible Accident” https://artifex.news/us-lawyer-burned-down-syndrome-sons-body-after-fatally-shooting-him-cops-7195902/ Sat, 07 Dec 2024 15:56:28 +0000 https://artifex.news/us-lawyer-burned-down-syndrome-sons-body-after-fatally-shooting-him-cops-7195902/ Read More “US Lawyer Fatally Shoots Son, Burns Body Before Telling Cops “It Was Horrible Accident”” »

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A lawyer in the United States allegedly shot his 20-year-old son, burnt his body and then called the cops to tell them what he claimed was a “horrible accident”. According to the People, 68-year-old Michael Howard from Houston, Texas, was arrested on Monday and charged with murder and tampering with evidence. His son, Mark Howard, was diagnosed with Down syndrome and held a job. The father allegedly told the cops that he had “mistaken” his son “for an intruder at his property” and shot him. 

Sabine County investigator JP MacDonough said that the 68-year-old showed officers around his property when they arrived at the scene, the outlet reported. He provided them with the shotgun he allegedly used to shoot his son before leading them to the wood pile where the 20-year-old’s burned body was. 

Michael Howard “had taken the body of the deceased, placed it in the front loading bucket of a backhoe tractor, and carried it to a remote area on his property and placed the body on a pile of wood and other burnable material, which had been previously set up and then, his words, ‘cremated’ his son in accordance with what he felt his son would have wanted,” the investigator said, adding that the crime scene appeared to have been “washed” with a “water hose”. 

Howard says the “whole thing was a horrible accident,” JP MacDonough alleged. 

“It is a bizarre crime. Mr Howard committed this act and then in the furtherance of that, burned the body and then cleaned the crime scene, which as an investigator I would take as indicative of nefarious purposes,” MacDonough said. 

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The victim’s mother and his two siblings were not at the home at the time of the incident, police said. 

Separately, the district attorney said that his office is looking into possible additional charges including the desecration and mishandling of a corpse as well as other charges related to tampering with the scene of a crime.

Currently, the 68-year-old is in custody. His bond is set at $10 million per charge. 




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Down syndrome, Edwards syndrome found in ancient individuals https://artifex.news/article67878795-ece/ Sat, 24 Feb 2024 15:40:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67878795-ece/ Read More “Down syndrome, Edwards syndrome found in ancient individuals” »

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Researchers have reported chromosomal disorders discovered from prehistoric skeletal remains, dating up to approximately 5,500 years old — including six cases of Down syndrome and one case of Edwards syndrome. According to the authors of a paper published in the journal Nature Communications, the findings may represent the first time Edwards syndrome has been identified from historic or prehistoric remains.

Individuals with chromosomal trisomy carry three copies of a chromosome in their cells, instead of two. Trisomy of chromosomes number 21 or 18 result in Down syndrome and Edwards syndrome, respectively. There have only been a few documented cases of Down syndrome in ancient individuals, largely owing to difficulties in identifying genetic disorders without modern techniques for analysing ancient DNA samples. How certain ancient societies were affected by and responded to genetic disorders remains elusive.

Dr.Adam Rohrlach from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany and others screened almost 10,000 genomes from ancient human skeletal remains from either Ireland, Bulgaria, Greece, Spain or Finland for chromosomal trisomies and identified six cases of Down syndrome and one case of Edwards syndrome. These individuals, who mostly died either before or shortly after birth. Some of the cases were particularly ancient; two were from as far back as the Bronze Age (about 2,700 BCE) and one from the Neolithic period (about 3,500 BCE).

“When skeletal preservation and completeness was sufficient, we record all observed pathological lesions, and match these to osteological markers which are consistent with a diagnosis of the trisomy,” they write.

“Three cases of trisomy 21 [Down syndrome], and the case of trisomy 18 [Edwards syndrome] were detected in two contemporaneous sites in early Iron Age Spain (800-400 BCE), potentially suggesting a higher frequency of burials of trisomy carriers in those societies,” they write.

The authors note that all individuals appear to have been cared for after death through various rituals indicating recognition of them as part of their communities, and in a few cases were given exceptional burials or elaborate grave goods. For example, the individual buried in Early Iron Age Navarra, Spain, was buried with bronze rings, a Mediterranean seashell, and surrounded by the remains of three sheep and/or goats. The findings offer some perspective into the way that these conditions were recognised among past communities.



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