Uh, that was inappropriate, but who was in the vicinity of the crime scene to dime him out?
For those who know, I'm an ex-cop, and I've been to a number of death scenes. Most of the time, it was an elderly person who died of natural causes. There's nothing to see but a saggy body. To look under the sheet of a dead person isn't really disturbing the crime scene. That happens multiple times after a deceased body is covered. Why? Investigators who arrive after the body is initially covered wants to investigate on his/her own, take pictures, look for clues and/or evidence. Also, for training reasons, an officer in training views possible injury marks like bullet holes, knife wounds, etc, rigor mortis, clues. along with a field training officer.
Just to look at a celebrity dead body for the sake of checking it out is inappropriate. If he wanted to check that it was Whitney Houston, he only had to uncover from the top to see the face.
For those who know, I'm an ex-cop, and I've been to a number of death scenes. Most of the time, it was an elderly person who died of natural causes. There's nothing to see but a saggy body. To look under the sheet of a dead person isn't really disturbing the crime scene. That happens multiple times after a deceased body is covered. Why? Investigators who arrive after the body is initially covered wants to investigate on his/her own, take pictures, look for clues and/or evidence. Also, for training reasons, an officer in training views possible injury marks like bullet holes, knife wounds, etc, rigor mortis, clues. along with a field training officer.
Just to look at a celebrity dead body for the sake of checking it out is inappropriate. If he wanted to check that it was Whitney Houston, he only had to uncover from the top to see the face.