France Inquest records France

Nicola Bulley inquest opening hears she was identified by dental records after body pulled from river

manchestereveningnews.co.uk

The body of Nicola Bulley, which was pulled from the River Wyre on Sunday, was identified by her dental records. An inquest into the death of the dog walker, from Inskip, who went missing in the village of St Michael's on Wyre, Lancashire, on January 27 sparking a widespread police search, was opened at Preston Coroner’s Court this afternoon (Wednesday, February 22).

Her body was pulled from the water around a mile from where Nicola was last seen on Sunday morning after police received reports that a body had been spotted in reeds by a dog walker.

It was confirmed by police to be that of the 45-year-old around 24 hours later. READ MORE: Teacher 'stabbed to death by student during class' in France Maxillofacial surgeon Andrew Ian Edwards examined the mum-of-two’s dental records, which had been obtained by police from her dental surgery, to provide a positive ID, the five-minute hearing heard.

Speaking at the opening of the inquest, senior coroner Dr James Adeley said: “He examined the body that was located in the River Wyre near Rawcliffe Road in St Michael’s on Wyre at 2.15pm on February 20.” He said the surgeon found restorative work carried out was identical.

Related News
The vision, as announced by French President Emmanuel Macron, is to take the ceremony out of its customary location in the main stadium and put it in the heart of the capital.
Pam Shriver says Coco Gauff is an “exceptional” player who should win “plenty” of big titles over her career – but that her forehand still needs to be “solved”. Gauff turned 19 on March 13, hours after her straight-sets win over Linda Noskova in the third round of Indian Wells. Ad It was nearly four years ago that she burst onto the scene at Wimbledon when she came through qualifying and beat Venus Williams on her way to the fourth round.
The unprecedented opening ceremony planned for the 2024 Paris Olympics, just 500 days away, promises to be both spectacular and a serious security headache, with the arrangements still being worked out by anxious officials. The vision, as announced by French President Emmanuel Macron, is to take the ceremony out of its customary location in the main stadium and put it in the heart of the capital. Sporting delegations are set to sail down the river Seine in boats, an armada of sporting excellence set against the backdrop of the capital's world-famous monuments in view of up to 600,000 cheering spectators.
EDINBURGH: Ireland's versatility and ability to adapt in times of duress is a key part of their success, coach Andy Farrell said after they played for most of the second half without a hooker in the 22-7 Six Nations win over Scotland at Murrayfield.
Ireland took another step towards the Grand Slam with an incredibly hard-fought and costly victory over Scotland.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.