Coroner in a sentence as a noun

>why the **** do we elect coroners?I've wondered that as well.

Damn, ".. Webb was found dead from two gunshot wounds to the head, which the coroner's office judged a *******.

In 2004, Webb was found dead from two gunshot wounds to the head, which the coroner's office judged a *******.

Or did the news of his death just fall off the radar so much that no one checked the coroner's office earlier?

What are even the issues in a coroner election?

Here they cover expert evidence given to the coroner.

We will never know the truth about how he died and it does him an injustice to speculate as the coroner at the time did.

At the inquest, the coroner, Mr JAK Ferns declared: "In a man of his type, one never knows what his mental processes are going to do next.

I meant that the coroner would have no need to test the apple given that he'd seen so much cyanide in liquid form in Turing's stomach.

The RT story about the coroner and arsenic seems to be fringe conspiracy theory material that does not stand up well to scrutiny.

Unless this fictional example kid is literally dying before your eyes and you think medics/the coroner are going to have to be involved, what's the point of calling the cops?

There's a "coroner's jury" in some jurisdictions that hears evidence and decides whether the death was criminal, accidental, natural causes, etc.

If an inquest finds that a death was in fact a homicide, then the coroner's findings are handed over to the Crown Prosecution Service, which operates similarly to an American prosecutor's office.

I can't imagine anyone suggesting a falling-block rifle as a suitable assassin's tool today, and poisoning an alcoholic with morphine seems like it would alert any coroner immediately.

Are we suggesting that the coroner was aware of his homosexuality but not of the fact he was a brilliant mathematician?I mean, the coroner must at least have known that he had a chemistry lab, working with dangerous chemicals, in the house.

The punishment must be extended to all of the responsible people, those who give orders, those who feign of letting it happen, whatever their high office may be.."reminds me of the coroner at the inquest for the Bloody Sunday victims, himself a former Army officer:"They were shooting innocent people.

According to the police statement, White had his hands cuffed \n behind his back when he shot himself in the back.\n \n But according to the full final report of the Iberia Parish coroner, which \n was released nearly six months later and obtained exclusively by NBC News, \n White was shot in the front, not the back.

Coroner definitions

noun

a public official who investigates by inquest any death not due to natural causes