The second case involved the fatal fall of a slim woman from a 30-m-high cliff at a notorious suicide spot. There appeared to be no suspicious circumstances, apart from the fact the woman landed about 12 m from the vertical cliff face. The police noted that the distance was unusually large but did not pursue the matter. Several years later I was asked for an opinion, and I then conducted the tests shown in Fig. 2, based on the fact that the available run-up distance from the safety fence to the edge of the cliff was 4 m at most. Given that the required horizontal launch speed was at least 4.5 m/s and the woman had no special athletic ability, further tests were conducted which indicated that she was thrown head first by a strong male.