Belfast Telegraph

No evidence of sex assault in new Nora post-mortem

...but pathologis­t unable to rule out possibilit­y due to decomposed body

- By Tim Smith

A BRITISH pathologis­t has said there was no positive evidence that teenager Nora Quoirin who was found dead last year near a Malaysian jungle resort was sexually assaulted.

But Nathaniel Cary, a forensic pathologis­t who performed a second post-mortem on the body of Nora Anne Quoirin in the UK, also said he could not rule out the possibilit­y due to severe body decomposit­ion.

Mr Cary said he agreed with Malaysia’s findings that the teenager died of intestinal bleeding due to starvation and stress.

But he also told a Malaysian virtual inquest into Nora’s death, whose mother is from Belfast, that he could not fully exclude that the teen was sexually assaulted as sometimes it may not show. He also said the poor condition of the body made it hard to determine if there were semen traces or the DNA of strangers.

“I think we can exclude very serious trauma to the genitalia... but I won’t be able to exclude minimal trauma because of the decomposit­ion obscuring things,” Mr Cary said. “The difficulty here is because of the decomposit­ion, the forensic evidence would be disadvanta­ged to an extent.”

Nora disappeare­d from her family’s cottage at the Dusun eco-resort in southern Negeri Sembilan state on August 4, 2019, a day after her family arrived for a holiday. After a massive search her body was found on August 13 beside a stream on a palm oil estate about 1.6 miles from the resort.

Nora was only wearing her underwear when she went missing but her body was found naked. It was unclear what happened to her underwear, but police said the post-mortem showed no sign she was sexually assaulted.

Police also told the inquest that investigat­ions showed no criminal activity nor any indication Nora had been abducted. Police believe she climbed out of a window on her own.

Her family believes she was abducted because she had mental and physical disabiliti­es and could not have wandered off on her own.

Mr Cary said the Malaysian post-mortem had been thorough but still, it was difficult to ascertain “in what circumstan­ces the death occurred” due to decomposit­ion.

He agreed with Nora’s family lawyer that foreign DNA, if it exists, could also have been washed away as her feet and hands were immersed in water for a few days before her body was found.

Asked by the family’s lawyer, Mr Cary agreed that he could not exclude the possibilit­y that her body may have been placed there after her death, given that rescuers had searched the specific location. He also agreed there was no evidence Nora had any major falls in the rough terrain despite her physical disabiliti­es.

However, Mr Cary said the multiple laceration­s and scratches on Nora’s body indicated she had moved through dense undergrowt­h. The cuts on her feet were also “not trivial,” he said. Nora’s parents had told the inquest they noticed her feet “didn’t seem to be particular­ly damaged” when they identified her body.

“I see no reason to dispute the (Malaysian) findings, although like me, the Malaysian pathologis­ts were clearly disadvanta­ged by the decomposit­ion,” he added.

Nora’s parents in their testimony earlier had spoke at length about her disabiliti­es, and said she would not have the stamina nor instinct to survive in the jungle on her own.

The inquest is being held via video-conferenci­ng and is expected to conclude next month.

‘I see no reason to dispute their findings, although the Malaysian pathologis­ts were clearly disadvanta­ged by decomposit­ion’

 ??  ?? Found dead: Nora Quoirin
Found dead: Nora Quoirin

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