This question has been addressed here previously, but I think it deserves another look:

When Elvis was suffering some sort of medical emergency on August 16, 1977, and upon hearing about this emergency, David Stanley drove his friend home. Why did Stanley enter the friend’s house, and then return to Graceland only because he heard the ambulance siren?

This is from David Stanley’s book, “My Brother Elvis,” published in 2016, and presumably written by…yeah, David Stanley. He wrote this. He wrote, “Mark and I walked into the house.” This is not one of those “My words have been taken out of context!” tantrums we see on Facebook every few years. This is not a misprint. This is not an editorial mistake. This is not a typo. This is not a misquote. This is David Stanley stating, on the record, in his own book, that when he got word of Elvis experiencing some sort of medical situation, supposedly during Stanley’s shift as Elvis’s personal aide and caretaker, Stanley not only left the property and drove his friend home, for no discernible reason, but then, upon arriving at the friend’s house, got out of his car, walked into the house, and only when he heard an ambulance siren did he decide to return to Graceland (“Man, I gotta go.”)

If he believed Elvis was just “sick,” why did he think the siren was coming from an ambulance headed for Graceland?

But more to the point:

Why did he enter the house?

This defies explanation.

It’s almost as if…