Sarah Boone calls authorities to report that her boyfriend, Jorge Torres Jr. is dead in their home in Winter Park, Florida. The couple had been drinking the night before and thought it would be “funny” if Mr. Torres crawled inside a suitcase and Ms.Boone zipped him inside. She then goes upstairs and passes out in her bed. When she woke up the next morning she finds Torres still in the suitcase and unresponsive. After police uncovered video from Boone’s phone with Torres yelling Boones name and attempting to escape, they charge her with second-degree murder.
In this episode of Body Bags, forensics expert Joseph Scott Morgan and Jackie Howard discuss what happens to your body when it’s deprived of oxygen, positional vs. compression asphyxiation, how much of a role the couple’s alcohol consumption played into the case, injuries sustained by Mr. Torres, and much more.
Show Notes:
0:00 - Intro
1:40 - Background and overview of case
3:25 - Cause of death
5:40 - Positional asphyxiation
8:00 - What volume of oxygen does your brain require?
10:30 - What does lack of oxygen do to your body?
15:45 - How is it exactly that lack of oxygen makes you die?
18:05 - Fear of running out of oxygen
20:25 - Other items found in the suitcase
23:25 - Compression asphyxia vs. Positional asphyxia
26:35 - How compressed does your chest have to be for asphyxiation to occur?
28:45 - How much of a role did alcohol play in this case?
30:55 - Discovering a body in a suitcase
31:35 - Injuries Mr. Torres sustained
35:40 - Could Torres have gotten out of the suitcase?
37:55 - History of domestic violence
39:14 - Wrap up

Suspect Confesses To Pastor's Murder, Demands Execution! You Won't Believe Why!
40:21

Man Arrested For 1980 Murder! DNA and Jailhouse Snitch Finger Suspect in 46 Year Cold Case
47:54

Brutal Rape, Execution Style Murder: The Death of Barbara Waldman, Solved After 52 Years
41:15