People are running for judge, county commissioner, school board, dogcatcher, coroner, and they are all strangers to me. |
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Adam and the others fled to the Church of Branscombe, confessed their crime, and abjured the realm before the coroner. |
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Gilbert confessed before the coroner and abjured the realm, but Simon was found not guilty. |
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There has been a damning indictment of living conditions at a remote Aboriginal community by the West Australian coroner. |
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Bulky agricultural machinery which dominates country roads should be accompanied by advance warning vehicles, a coroner said. |
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The coroner has written in acknowledgement, and will report in more detail at a later date. |
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The jury later wrote to the coroner, deploring the fact that an unseaworthy ship could put to sea with a drunken captain. |
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The coroner accordingly left that verdict to the jury, and the jury returned a unanimous verdict of unlawful killing. |
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The coroner refused to leave the issue of neglect to the jury and the Court of Appeal held that he was right not to do so. |
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The coroner said he was not proposing to set out a list of recommendations to hospitals. |
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The coroner returned a suicide verdict, saying that Mr Kapustynski had clearly intended to kill himself. |
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The coroner recorded verdicts that the boys were unlawfully killed and their father took his own life. |
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You rightly said that the royal coroner announced earlier this year that there would be an inquest. |
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A coroner has called for a pedestrian crossing at a set of traffic lights after a pensioner was run over and killed last year. |
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The county coroner carried out an autopsy and his verdict on the cause of death was given in January of this year. |
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Records would be kept in tamper-proof containers in a safe at a secure location for release to the relevant state coroner as required. |
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A word must be said about the office of coroner, which too had something of a dual aspect. |
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The coroner recorded a verdict that he died from the industrial disease mesothelioma, an asbestos-related cancer. |
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The coroner was due to open an inquest into his death today at Burnley Magistrates Court. |
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The coroner concluded that his tolerance to the drug had probably fluctuated which meant his body could not cope with it. |
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Later, a coroner found that he had been tomahawked several times, causing instant death. |
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But North Yorkshire coroner Geoff Fell recorded an open verdict, saying he was not convinced the overdose had anything to do with toothache. |
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Police are treating the death as a tragic accident and the coroner has been informed. |
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The results of a post-mortem examination revealed the cause of death was unascertainable and a file has now been passed to the coroner. |
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At the inquest into the deaths the coroner had criticised fire safety standards in British furniture. |
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Returning an open verdict, the deputy coroner concluded that the medical cause of death was unascertained. |
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Recording a verdict of accidental death, coroner Dr Roy Palmer said the tragedy had been unavoidable. |
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A coroner has rejected a family's claims that medical neglect contributed to the death of their war-veteran father. |
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The coroner has urged those who know the names of the killers to break their silence. |
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Wiltshire's deputy coroner William Bache delivered a verdict of accidental death. |
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As well as looking into unexpected or violent deaths in their district, the coroner inquires into finds of treasure. |
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And Wiltshire coroner David Masters has recommended halfway houses for mental health patients to try and prevent tragedy happening again. |
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The town coroner, Horace is a nervous, businesslike man who is haunted by the people who died in his medical care during the war. |
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Another coroner bought a cassette player to record court hearings from a car boot sale. |
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A coroner has urged climbers to exercise extreme caution when tackling limestone cliffs in the Dales. |
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Mr Clarke was accompanied by a solicitor and was cautioned by the coroner before taking the stand. |
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There are no charges at an inquest and the coroner must decide the scope of the inquiry which is appropriate and the witnesses to be summoned. |
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A coroner has recorded a verdict of death from industrial disease after an ex-fireman died of lung cancer brought on by years of inhaling dust. |
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The matter has now been referred to the coroner and an inquest into the death will be held in due course. |
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Six jurors believed, like the coroner, that it was acute cocaine intoxication. |
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If the State pathologist confirms a death is due to unnatural causes the coroner must hold an inquest by law. |
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The Cumbrian police spokesman said the death was not being treated as suspicious and the coroner had been informed. |
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The circumstances of the two deaths will be passed to the coroner so that inquests can be held. |
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Officers are investigating what happened on behalf of the coroner, before an inquest takes place. |
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At her inquest, the coroner recorded an open verdict because he was not convinced she intended to kill herself. |
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Officers from the police and fire services are compiling a report which will be passed to the coroner for an inquest. |
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There has been no request from a coroner to investigate a suspicious death. |
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Police have ruled out suspicious circumstances and the matter has been passed to the coroner for an inquest. |
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Mr Field must now wait for the Suffolk coroner to hold an inquest to decide if the coins are treasure trove of if they will be returned to him. |
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It analyses the contemporary role of the coroner and how the institution of coronership is likely to evolve in the post-Shipman era. |
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When a person dies due to a foul-up, a coroner inevitably offers recommendations on how such disasters could be henceforth avoided. |
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The coroner expedites the paperwork for a death certificate, and the funeral director secures a burial license. |
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He agreed with the coroner that on the balance of probability it was likely someone else had been in the graveyard when the stone fell on Adam. |
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This is not a film that asks you to empathise with or even understand the coroner. |
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Inquests are usually held in public, with witnesses being examined by the coroner and interested parties. |
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Cheshire coroner Nicholas Rheinberg said expert witnesses were satisfied the shotgun, which had an automatic safety catch, could not have discharged accidentally. |
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I just take them to Colonel March, the coroner, tell him where I found them and he rules they're lost property, not treasure trove, and gives them back to me. |
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The three were unacquainted, but the coroner discovers a mysterious black fungus in their brains, along with evidence that they had all died in a hallucinatory state. |
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The coroner would also note the tiny hemorrhages that accompany strangulation. |
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However, the coroner did not rule out gunshot wounds, or asphyxiation as the likely cause of his demise. |
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The coroner also stressed the family of the deceased had a right to obtain a death certificate which would allow them to put the deceased man's affairs in order. |
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At an inquest last month the coroner said a police inquiry should be held. |
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A Victorian coroner has subpoenaed the man acquitted of one the State's most notorious murders to give evidence at another inquest into the death. |
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A coroner weighed into the national controversy over speed cameras when he suggested that one may have caused a fatal accident by distracting the driver. |
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At last month's inquest, coroner Fiona Wilcox concluded Mrs Saldanha had taken her own life. |
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The coroner described the crash as one of unspeakable tragedy. |
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The coroner says that tragically the deaths were not isolated incidents, as petrol sniffing at Balgo is widespread and some children are chronic sniffers by the age of eight. |
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The coroner recorded a verdict of death as a result of an accident. |
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Police are preparing a report for the coroner and an inquest will be held. |
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After hearing the results of the post-mortem carried out by consultant pathologist Dr William Keeley, the coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death. |
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People can object, but if the coroner considers that any delay may limit the ability to determine the cause of death, then the post-mortem will go ahead. |
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The coroner will formally open and adjourn the inquest today in Salisbury. |
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A rider handed in by the jury indicated a failing of the prison service in its duty of care to the deceased, which rider the coroner refused to append to the inquisition. |
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The Divisional Court directed the coroner to resume the inquest. |
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The coroner, a thin, elderly, spectacled man, dressed entirely in black, peered disapprovingly at the crowd and wearily sighed as he took his place at the table. |
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The full police file would be passed to the coroner for an inquest. |
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Garner was pronounced dead an hour later, and the city coroner ruled his death a homicide. |
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The coroner says the death was caused by the injuries he incurred from the fall. |
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McPherson died of a pulmonary embolism, though a coroner originally cited prolonged dehydration and bedrest as the cause. |
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However, the Sheffield coroner also condemned the placing of the sign, on the apex of a bend, and said he would be issuing a report to the Government on the tragedy. |
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The coroner will be opening an inquest either today or tomorrow. |
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Suicide is a touchy subject for the media, indeed the coroner has a full page of guidelines on how to write about it without inadvertently promoting it. |
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It has been referred to the coroner for the inquest to go ahead. |
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A PENSIONER declared dead by a coroner woke up in a body bag as he was about to be embalmed. |
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A ROAD where a young dad died after a tragic motorbike accident has been re-marked after a coroner wrote to a council requesting the work. |
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The coroner examined the body but found no evidence of foul play. |
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A third kind of jury, known as a coroner's jury can be convened in some common law jurisdiction in connection with an inquest by a coroner. |
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And the coroner said he was worried other people could use the Internet in copycat offences. |
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To the firemen, this fire in the house was as unaccountable as, to the coroner, was the burned body in the unscorched clothes. |
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Earlier, two coaches, escorted by police, transported the jury, counsel, court staff, the coroner and a small press pool to the stadium. |
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Waltham Forest coroner Nadia Persaud said it was not possible to confirm a cause of death and recorded an open verdict. |
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The coroner was told that Mr Jones, who used to work as a banksman in the mines, had gone to see his GP in August 2013 with a persistent cough. |
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Because the coroner was unable to determine which spouse predeceased the other, the probate court deemed their deaths to be simultaneous. |
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Asked by coroner Mary Hassell what lessons could be learned for the future, Mr De Nunzio said, 'The barriers should have some sort of fail-safe. |
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In a probe in October 2011, Assistant deputy coroner Suzanne Greenaway ruled that the singer died due to accidental alcohol poisoning. |
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Cardiff coroner Mary Hassel recorded a narrative verdict stating medical complications were to blame. |
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The coroner performed an autopsy on the murder victim's body. |
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Andrew Haigh, the coroner for South Staffordshire declared the hoard to be treasure, and therefore property of the Crown. |
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The coroner ruled the death an accidental carbitol overdose, although it was widely rumoured to be a suicide. |
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His daughter was initially suspected of poisoning him, though the coroner found he had died of natural causes. |
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A coroner ruled his death as accidental, although in the 1980s the Grimes letter saw publication, allowing for recognition of his suicide. |
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In 1189 it was purchased for the see but continued with a separate sheriff, coroner and court of pleas. |
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Greater Suffolk coroner Peter Dean was staging the hearing at Highpoint Prison near Bury St Edmunds, where Hindley served the last years of her life sentence. |
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If, during our excavations we happen upon inhumations or cremations, we are required to apply for a licence from the local coroner in order to exhume. |
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But, overturning the 1961 coronial finding, Victorian coroner John Olle ruled Ms Kramer's mother, Phyllis Loomes, had put the bag over Margaret's head. |
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William le Poer, coroner of Scilly, is recorded in 1305 as being worried about the extent of wrecking in the islands, and sending a petition to the King. |
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A coroner found earlier surgery would probably have saved Muldowney. |
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At the conclusion of the inquest into the seven deaths, the coroner for Furness and South Cumbria criticised the council for its health and safety failings. |
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Peter Wilson tried to get a grip in the snow using an ice-axe as he slipped from near the peak of Mount Glittertind, said Sandwell coroner Robin Balmain. |
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After the coroner is informed, it's virtually impossible to uninform him! |
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Assistant coroner Thomas Atherton recorded a medical cause of death of desmoplastic mesothelioma caused by asbestos exposure and a conclusion of industrial disease. |
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Although the formal cause of death will be confirmed by the coroner at a later date, police have issued a warning to others of the dangers of buying substances online. |
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