-100?
I think mathematics, speaking your own language and basic comprehension of written content, are skills long lost in the age of passive-agressive copy & paste Truthers with antisocial tendencies (I think you will agree and btw, you know we have more than one person with a psychology degree on this board, right?).
From what I read on 50's site, the mother asked for a second autopsy from a doctor she hired. That means that the results should be "inconclusive", as claiming the results of the first autopsy didn't "add up" should be expected. Just as OJ Simpson hiring a lawyer should be equal to expecting that said lawyer won't tell the judge "yup, he's guilty!", right?
If the results were really "inconclusive" in the first autopsy, yet the coroner/doctor/pathologist would've decided it was a self-inflicted wound, it'd have been really easy to start an investigation into a possible homicide case and that's exactly what the article would have read.
But that's not what the article says. It just talks about an alleged "inconclusive" (this can simply mean, that the doctor hasn't decided upon a result yet) result from a SECOND autopsy, not from a homicide department hired specialist, but from the side of those who questioned the result of the first one anyway.
A related thought: very pathological behavior (like necrophilia, pedophilia, etc...) are not shown to be passed down generations. They are completely abnormal. Now depression (often going in hand with substance abuse, but it doesn't have to), schizophrenia, etc... ARE passed down generations. Due to the fact that in certain areas of the US, over two centuries, the genetic pool of the African American was pretty limited (due to restrictions of movement/staying in the same area/same plantage, etc...) and such diseases/conditions are passed down generations MORE OFTEN than in other parts of the population. It is said that in certain areas of the US, an African American male is EIGHT TIMES AS LIKELY to be affected by depression, bi-polar disorder and related diseases/conditions than the Caucasian population.
And add to that that men in general are very reluctant to speak about that (hence why self-medication/substance abuse goes hand in hand with that), ESPECIALLY African American men and you've got a "disbelief" in the existence of depression and related diseases. It's sad and counterproductive.