Holiday 10-15-13 Michele MacNeill, a mother of eight children, was unresponsive in her bathtub, and Martin MacNeill, according to law enforcement at the scene, was hysterical and angry, cursing his wife for having had a recent face-lift. Michele MacNeill was pronounced dead later on April 11, 2007. The autopsy report determined she died of natural causes due to cardiovascular disease. But three years later, at the urging of her children, there was a new an*lysis of a toxicology report that changed everything. Combinations of medications found in Michele MacNeill's system were determined to have contributed to her d**h. Diazepam, Oxycodone, Promethazine and Zolpidem were all found in her system. Although none of the d** alone was at toxic levels, Dr. Todd Grey, chief medical examiner of the Utah State Medical Examiner's Office, determined that, in combination, the d** could have led to sedation and heart arrhythmia, resulting in cardiac d**h. On October 6, 2010, Michele MacNeill's cause of d**h was changed to "combined effects of heart disease and drug toxicity." The manner of d**h was changed from natural to undetermined. As investigators began to reopen the case, they realized they had a suspect: Michele MacNeill's husband. Michele and Martin MacNeill seemed to live the American dream. He a doctor and lawyer, she a former beauty queen, had raised their family in Utah. Four of their eight children were adopted. PSAT 10-17-13 A marine science instructor's late-afternoon snorkel off the Southern California coast last Sunday was first met with shock and soon excitement when she discovered a gigantic oarfish, a deep-sea creature that remains little known to the science world and people outside. Jasmine Santana was about 15 feet underwater when she found the 18-foot-long, silvery fish with reddish fins and eyes the size of a half-dollar staring at her from the sandy bottom. Realizing it was dead, she snatched the fish's tail, and using buoyancy and low tides, powered her way back on shore. After a 15-minute swim dragging the 400-pound carca**, she needed help from 14 others to lift the fish out of the water at Toyon Bay, California. Waddington, who has been with CIMI since 1994, said it remains unclear why the oarfish was found in shallow water this time, but it appeared to have died naturally. Waddington said while the oarfish's carca** is still being preserved in ice, CIMI has been sending some of its tissues and other samples to marine scientists, including Dr. Milton Love, a fish expert from University of California at Santa Barbara, to study its DNA and diet habits. Waddington said CIMI will likely to keep the fish's skeleton for educational purposes. Its program attracts more than 30,000 school-age children each year. 10-18-13 Similarities: They were both rappers They both got k**ed They both were shot by African american men Their crimes have not been solved They were both riding the pa**enger seat when they got shot They both died Differences: Biggy died faster than Tupac They were k**ed in different cities The car that shot biggy was chased but lost and the car that shot Tupac got away without a struggle There were more clues and suspects in biggies murder thsn in tupacs murder biggy didn't have a bodyguard like tupac