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Mother loses High Court challenge over murdered son's inquest

Mother loses High Court challenge over murdered son's inquest

Jada Bailey challenged the March 2024 decision of Graeme Irvine, the senior coroner for east London, not to resume the inquest into the death of her son, Jaden Moodie, who was stabbed nine times after being knocked off a scooter in Leyton, east London, on January 8 2019.
In December that year, then-19-year-old Ayoub Majdouline was jailed for life with a minimum term of 21 years for the killing, with the coroner issuing a certificate the same month stating that Jaden's inquest was not to be resumed.
Jaden Moodie was murdered in 2019 (Metropolitan Police/PA)
A Serious Case Review (SCR) – in which Jaden was referred to as Child C – released in May 2020 and carried out by the Safeguarding Children's Board for Waltham Forest, found that criminal gangs had groomed him for at least a year before his death.
It also found that there was a missed opportunity to protect the teenager from gangs when police found him in a property in Bournemouth, Dorset, with drugs and cash three months before he was murdered.
Ms Bailey applied for the inquest to be reopened in 2023 but had her request rejected in March 2024, which she then sought to challenge at the High Court in a hearing held in February and June this year.
But in a ruling on Monday, Mr Justice Swift dismissed the claim, upholding the coroner's finding that it was unlikely that their conclusion 'would go beyond the conclusions already reached'.
An inquest into Jaden's death was formally opened 10 days after his death, but was adjourned in April 2019 ahead of Majdouline's trial.
Ayoub Majdouline was jailed for the murder of 14-year-old Jaden Moodie (Met Police/PA)
Deciding not to resume Jaden's inquest in March 2024, Mr Irvine said he found the SCR and other reviews had 'covered the likely scope of an inquest' and there was 'involvement of the next of kin to the extent necessary to safeguard their legitimate interests'.
He said that 'any primary conclusion at inquest could not be inconsistent with the result of a criminal trial, and therefore 'unlawful killing' would be the most appropriate conclusion'.
He added that 'other inquiries into Jaden's death have been able to make recommendations and require action', and that he was therefore 'not satisfied… that there is sufficient reason' to resume the inquest.
Mr Justice Swift said in his ruling that Ms Bailey claimed that errors highlighted by the SCR 'ought to be investigated in further detail', and that the review 'failed the requirement for sufficient public scrutiny'.
But the judge said that the SCR report 'is a highly impressive piece of work' that gave a 'thorough and thoughtful consideration of all relevant matters'.
He continued that when 'considered in the round', the SCR report 'identifies and then scrutinises the acts and omissions of the relevant public authorities', and that Ms Bailey had the opportunity to be involved in it.
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'Death is part of your daily life': Ex-homicide detective reveals what it's REALLY like to discover a dead body - and why it's not like Silent Witness
'Death is part of your daily life': Ex-homicide detective reveals what it's REALLY like to discover a dead body - and why it's not like Silent Witness

Daily Mail​

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  • Daily Mail​

'Death is part of your daily life': Ex-homicide detective reveals what it's REALLY like to discover a dead body - and why it's not like Silent Witness

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'Death is part of your daily life,' he tells MailOnline in the brutally honest assessment you would expect from a hardened detective who has worked on the frontlines of homicide crime for three decades. It is clear that having worked on hundreds of murder cases, attending countless crime scenes and post-mortems, Mr Allain has become astonishingly desensitised to seeing dead bodies. 'It's obviously quite shocking,' he concedes. 'But you're there to do a professional job and you put any anxieties aside. You've got to crack on and just investigate the circumstances. There's a great sense of professional pride that takes over.' Seeing murder victims is something detectives just get used to, he says, adding: 'You're immersed in that environment. You go to post-mortems and crime scenes and see death as part of your daily life.' The harder part, Mr Allain admits, is meeting the victims' grieving families and supporting them when they see the beaten or burned bodies of their loved ones. He says in the past 'you would actively dissuade families to view the remains', but the 'culture has changed' and relatives often want to see the remains to 'see their loved one for the last time'. Mr Allain added: 'No two people grieve the same way, you do get different reactions... I've had every emotion in front of me from families being perfectly lucid - not visibly distressed - through to people flailing around on the floor in grief.' 'Sometimes there's even anger directed towards you because they see you as the authority.' His first homicide case, in 1991, was a 'nasty' murder in Peckham where an old man was queuing up in a benefits office when three men dragged him into a disused warehouse and beat him to death. 'This guy was clubbed to death and then they set the whole building on fire,' he recalled. 'This poor guy's remains were found and I was the exhibits officer on that case which was quite unusual for a trainee detective back then.' 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Mahil, who lured Mr Singh to her university house in Brighton, was jailed for six years for causing grievous bodily harm. The victim was unaware that Shoker and Peters were waiting for him in the bedroom and they violently attacked him, wrapped him in a duvet and put him in the boot of his Mercedes before taking the car to Blackheath and burning it. Mr Singh was still alive when the car went up in flames and died of breathing in toxic fumes. Recalling the gruesome case, Mr Allain said: 'When he arrived, he goes in there and he's basically battered with a camera tripod and he's bundled into his own Mercedes and then driven up to Blackheath, where they torched the car.' He continued: 'Obviously, we've got a situation where there's disfigurement of the body. It obviously makes life slightly more difficult. 'When you've got fire involved, of course that destroys any potential often for forensic evidence as well. 'You've got little or no chance of getting any sort of DNA or any other trace evidence, and you've obviously got the added where you've got to identify who the victim is, because visual identification is often impossible. 'You've got to manage the family as well in terms of do they want to see their loved one? We would never accept a visual identification, but obviously, once we know who the victim is, either through odontology or through DNA, the family may well want to view the body and that happened in this case. 'The mother and her daughter [Gagandip's sister] were insistent on seeing him which is difficult to manage.' The victim's sister, Amandip Kaur Singh, previously relieved the harrowing moment on 5Star, saying: 'Having to see the burnt body is something I can't believe, I don't know how we got through that. 'There was no skin, he had gone charcoal colour. His eyes had sunk in. He didn't even look like a human. It was scary, but he was my brother so I had to go.' 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Mr Francis, described by prosecutors as a 'career criminal' with a 'chequered history' is believed to have played a role in helping to dispose of a large part of the Brinks-Mat gold bullion heist in 1983. Adding to the 'Brinks-Mat curse', he was the ninth man linked to the robbery to be killed Recalling the case, Mr Allain told MailOnline: 'That was quite an interesting case. It was challenging in a number of ways, because it cut across not just homicide, but organised crime.' In grisly detail, he revealed: 'It was an execution style shooting as well. The guy just turned up for work and he was just shot point blank range in the head. He was shot four times. 'It's quite chilling to think that the guy's just driving to work and then, all of a sudden, he's been shot in quite a cool and collected fashion.' Mr Allain explained how one of the first decisions to make in this case was whether you are going to 'extricate the body from the vehicle or take the vehicle with the body inside to a sterile location where you can conduct forensic work'. Mr Allain and and his team were able to snare the killers after a pair of glasses and a cigarette left at the scene showed traces of O'Flynn and Conaghan's DNA. Despite working on some horrific murder cases, the former detective is incredibly matter of fact when it comes to discovering dead bodies. He tells MailOnline: 'I think your initial feeling is dependent on the circumstances. You can be shocked in terms of how that person has died. With Cathy Marlow, she's died in her office block in quite an horrific attack... that does make you stop and think and it is quite shocking. 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Man arrested at US Treasury building after climbing gate, agency says

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Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

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Bomb squad deployed after suspicious package discovered near White House

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