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Updated: June 16, 2025
Hinde, one of the coroners for the eastern division of the county of Kent, who refused to give up the key of the room, but allowed Mr. Lewis and his jury to view the body.
Coroners Feinberg and Holtzhauser with Coroner's Physician Weston arranged to go down the bay on the Patrol, while Coroner Hellenstein waited at the pier. An undertaker was notified to be ready if needed. Fortunately there was no such need.
I'm not saying they're not agreeable, well-informed, and mild in their habits; but they lean overmuch to corduroys and coroners' inquests for one's taste farther south.
If I was 'im I'd a cut 'is throat, and left the razor in 'is 'and, and they'd a brought it in soosanside. Bless you, coroners' juries is reg'lar flats at findin' out them sort of things." "Suppose you read what it says," said Reginald, hardly able to restrain a laugh; "if you like you can read it aloud; I'd like to hear it again myself."
Anyhow, Bart, me an' you ain't doctors, nor yet coroners or undertakers, so you'd better skip along an' build a fire under the donkey aft. Matches in the galley, of course." "I wish she was a schooner," McGuffey complained, edging over to the weather rail. "It'd be easier for us two to sail her then.
Amidst the many judicial reforms of Henry or Edward the Shire Court remained unchanged. But save that the king's reeve had taken the place of the king and that the Norman legislation had displaced the Bishop and set four Coroners by the Sheriff's side, the gathering of the freeholders remained much as of old.
The coroner's jury sat upon the case as coroners' juries have been sitting upon similar cases ever since English jurisprudence advanced to the stage of not executing people on suspicion.
At the end of February there was a meeting of coroners in Cork, at which they came to the determination of holding no more starvation inquests. Letters from Mayo to the Dublin Freeman's Journal, signed W.G. The italics in the above quotation are W.G.'s. It is not to be inferred from this, that evictions were rare in Ireland immediately preceding the Famine.
The justices could themselves act as coroners, but annually two or more coroners for each parish were appointed by the governor.
The automobile, a small runabout, drew up at the entrance to the court. A little wizened man, with yellowish skin stretched across high cheek bones, stepped out and walked up the path. "Well!" he said shrilly. "What you doing, Doctor Groom?" "Waiting to witness another reason why coroners should be abolished," the doctor rumbled. "This is the dead man's grandson, Coroner; and Mr.
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