Exact cause of death of Adam Stanmore impossible to say THE BODY of a man found dead in woodland was so decomposed that it was impossible to say exactly how he died, an inquest heard yesterday. Adam Stanmore was found dead in an area behind Grenoble Road in Blackbird Leys on June 13, 2019 – four weeks after he went missing. Yesterday, 10 jurors at Oxford Coroner’s Court, who will give a verdict on how he died, heard evidence from the forensic pathologist who examined Mr Stanmore’s body. He said the ‘plausible’ cause of death was ‘probably hanging’ but it is not possible to exclude any other theories completely because of the condition he was found in.
Jury to decide verdict on Adam Stanmore s death after he was tasered and arrested by police THE LAST time Adam Stanmore was seen alive, he was in the ‘most vulnerable place in his life’ and desperately needed help. But his mother, in a statement read to jurors at Oxford Coroners’ Court yesterday, said that ‘all the opportunities’ were ‘missed’ by police, paramedics, doctors and mental health services. Mr Stanmore was found dead in an Oxford woodland on June 13, 2019 – weeks after he went missing. In a summary of the events leading up to his death, the court heard how on April 23, 2019, he had phoned the GP asking for an emergency appointment after hearing voices saying that his mum and brother would be killed if he did not kill himself.
Tributes and messages to family of missing Oxfordshire teen THE FAMILY of an Oxfordshire teenager who was missing for five days are today in shock after a body was found in a village. 19-year-old Joseph Harrow was last seen by his parents leaving his address in Didcot in the early hours of Saturday morning, at about 4.30am. Police officers made desperate appeals for any information on his whereabouts after he had failed to return home by Wednesday. Investigators said they were ‘very concerned’ for his welfare and even appealed to him directly to get in touch with his family to let them know he was safe.
Police still investigating death of Teesside man five years after Didcot Power Station collapse
Mick Collings lost his life after Didcot Power Station partially collapsed
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Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice Police are still investigating the death of a Teesside man in a power station collapse - five years on.
The boiler house at Didcot Power Station in Oxfordshire partially collapsed on February 23, 2016.
Jonathan Miall died on July 2 at his farm near Bicester. At his inquest at Oxford Coroners’ Court on January 19, the head coroner for the county, Darren Salter, said that the 46-year-old farmer had been attempting to fix an oil leak on his boom sprayer by tightening a safety valve. The inquest heard that when he threaded the broken part it caused the safety valve to become detached and resulted in the uncontrolled lowering of the boom which crushed him against the tank. Mr Salter ruled the death as an accident. -