The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sexual allegation­s not allowed at inquest

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Sexual misconduct allegation­s at the notorious Deepcut army barracks will not be considered as part of the inquest of a young soldier who died at the base, a coroner has ruled.

Private Sean Benton was found with five bullets in his chest in June 1995, shortly after he had been told he was to be discharged from the army.

His family’s legal team had asked that “cogent” allegation­s of sexual miscount by NCOs against female trainees be considered within the scope of a new inquest into his death, due to begin in January.

They submitted such allegation­s made by potential witnesses were relevant to show propensity of those NCOs to abuse their positions of power and trust.

There is no evidence of any sexual misconduct against Pte Benton, who was from Hastings, East Sussex.

Judge Peter Rook QC said the allegation­s may be “reprehensi­ble” and “potentiall­y humiliatin­g for the victim” but were not of “sufficient probative force” to be considered as part of the inquest.

He told a pre-inquest hearing at Woking Coroner’s Court yesterday: “None of the sexual misconduct allegation­s individual­ly or collective­ly is of sufficient probative force in respect of the issues that need to be resolved within the scope of this inquest.”

He added: “My statutory task is to determine how and in what circumstan­ces Sean Benton came by his death, not to review more generally the wider behaviour of NCOs at Deepcut.”

A previous ruling determined that the inquest can hear evidence alleging one of the young private’s former instructor­s bullied other recruits.

A soldier from Perth, Private James Collinson, was also found dead in 2002 having served at the barracks.

 ??  ?? Private Sean Benton.
Private Sean Benton.

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