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narrative verdict การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • A coroner giving a narrative verdict may choose to refer to the other verdicts.
  • A February 2011 coroner's narrative verdict reported that Norgrove died during the failed rescue attempt.
  • Earland, the Exeter and Greater Devon Coroner, recorded a narrative verdict and came up with several recommendations.
  • On 16 March, coroner Andrew Walker returned a narrative verdict, stating that the killing of Hull was " unlawful ".
  • After hearing testimony from eyewitnesses, including other members of Shaw's group, the inquest concluded with a narrative verdict in October 2010.
  • A narrative verdict may also consist of answers to a set of questions posed by the Coroner to himself or to the jury ( as appropriate ).
  • On 23 July 2013 the jury returned a narrative verdict saying " The method of local isolation was communicated verbally but was not physically demonstrated to the deceased men.
  • Jeremiah's lecture notes and bulletins showed the anti-Semitic nature of [ the ] ideology . " The coroner, Dr . William Dolman, delivered a narrative verdict:
  • In 2015, Salisbury coroner David Ridley raised several  points of concern relating to the vehicle when recording a narrative verdict on the deaths of four soldiers who drowned in Helmand, Afghanistan in June 2010.
  • A'narrative verdict'was delivered in 2014 at the inquest into Sarah's death, stating that she had entered the enclosure but that it was not at that time possible to determine how this had happened.
  • The narrative verdict found that all eight victims were " unlawfully killed " and blamed the Philippine authorities'incompetent handling of the crisis as a direct cause of their deaths, although it declined to attribute any criminal or civil liability.
  • In 2006, the coroner's tribunal into the accident returned a narrative verdict on the death with some indication that the accident was more the result of the restraints being improperly secured by staff as opposed to fundamentally inadequate in and of themselves.
  • The jury concluded in a narrative verdict on 6 July that the use of the Taser did not directly cause Begley's heart to stop, but the restraint and the Taser " more than materially contributed " to a combination of stressful factors which triggered cardiac arrest.
  • On 23 April 2013, an inquest at Oxford Coroner's Court into the death of Becky Godden-Edwards recorded a narrative verdict stating that the cause of her death, believed to have been in 2003, was " unascertained but probably caused unlawfully by a third party ."
  • The coroner at the inquest reached a narrative verdict and stated that cause of death was by " self suspension ", but that there was insufficient evidence to determine whether it was intentional as he may have intended to make a " dramatic gesture " and then " nodded off to sleep ".
  • The coroner returned a narrative verdict recording the circumstances without attributing the cause, in which he said the water supply company, South West Water Authority had been " gambling with as many as 20, 000 lives " when they failed to inform the public about the poisoning for 16 days, a delay he called unacceptable.
  • The Oxfordshire Coroner delivered a narrative verdict in which he said the final pathological event was " unascertained ", but he saw no significant evidence of neglect or self-neglect ( neglect has a very precise legal definition ), suicide, or unlawful killing ( for which a high evidence threshold must be crossed before a coroner can deliver it as a verdict ).
  • Detective Chief Inspector Colin Smith of the Metropolitan Police told an inquest, opened 22 October in the Salisbury coroner's court, that the examination identified the cause of death as " penetrating fragment injuries to the head and chest . " In February 2011 the coroner recorded a narrative verdict confirming the earlier military investigations'findings that Norgrove was killed by a member of the U . S . rescue team, noting that a gunshot wound to the leg Norgrove received during the rescue did not contribute to her death.
  • The court heard from Catherine Picard, a French expert on cults, that Duggan might have experienced " intense pressure and psychological violence " at the conference, including one-on-one sessions, hours of lectures, and " being subjected to repeated conspiracy theories and antisemitic discourse . " Matthew Feldman, a historian at Teesside University and expert on the far right, testified that, if other participants had learned that Duggan was Jewish, British and had attended the Tavistock Clinic, " it would have been taken very seriously by the movement . " Walker delivered a narrative verdict: