As I've said before, the real physical facts should have been a part of the medical examiners report. Universal and the attorney will have access to that. This comment is pure conjecture, but I can speak from experience on what happens if your femur and hip breaks at the point of connection. I had a
bad fall last October. My femur (which is the longest bone in the body) fractured and broke away from the hip and the hip also fractured. I was home
alone. The pain was so intense that I couldn't stop screaming since those broken bones were flailing against all the nerve endings. I almost passed out
a couple of times. I lost all body control and couldn't even drag my body. Any small movement resulted in excruciating, unbelievable, pain. The phone
was about ten feet away. The best I could do was use my head to rub against my bookcase, and then desk, to move my body. It took about 30 minutes to move that 10 feet to the phone. It took 4 paramedics to move my crumpled up body. Lots of morphine on the way and at the hospital. Almost immediate operation. The paramedic blog that's being referenced suggests that may have happened. Spinal injury from birth and probably atrophied legs that would easily break, and unconsciousness setting in from the extreme pain, and no ability for the body to brace itself. We don't know for sure what happened, but my comment describes how intense the pain can be and that could induce unconsciousness....and the blunt injuries follow a limp body......And your body is certainly limp if both hip and femur fractures.