Otago Daily Times

Packs to outline how mosque victims died

- LINCOLN TAN

CHRISTCHUR­CH: Families of those killed in the Christchur­ch mosque shootings will receive packages with specific informatio­n about how their loved ones died, chief coroner Judge Deborah Marshall says.

Judge Marshall said she wrote last month to the families of the 51 victims who died in the March 15, 2019, shootings at the Al Noor and Linwood mosques regarding the coronial process.

‘‘The purpose of the letter is to offer access to as much informatio­n as possible about the events of 15 March, 2019, particular­ly around the cause and circumstan­ces of how their loved ones died,’’ she said.

‘‘This is the purpose of the Coroners Court — to establish the facts of how someone died and, where possible, to make recommenda­tions for how similar deaths could be prevented in the future.’’

Together with police, she was making available to the families a package of informatio­n relating to the event and the cause and circumstan­ces of death, she said.

There will be two sets of informatio­n, one with a general level of detail and another with more specific informatio­n about how a particular person died.

The package will include a timeline of events as recorded by police, photos of victims as they entered the mosque for prayers that day and a view of where each victim was when they died.

There will also be a report from the forensic pathologis­t on the nature of the victims’ fatal injuries.

‘‘Over the following weeks they will also be able to write to me to request any further details or to set out issues that come within the coronial jurisdicti­on and which they consider are not resolved by the prosecutio­n process or the royal commission of inquiry report,’’ Judge Marshall said.

The Coroners Court and police family liaison officers would work together to resolve any issues and provide as much informatio­n as legally possible, she said. — The New Zealand Herald

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