The Chronicle (South Tyneside and Durham)

Teen killed in blast had been ‘loving life’

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A GATESHEAD teenager who dreamed of becoming a criminal psychologi­st would probably never have understood the “cruel criminal act” that took her life, the chairman of the Manchester Arena bombing inquiry has said.

University student Courtney Boyle, 19, was waiting in the City Room foyer to pick up her younger sister Nicole at the end of the fateful Ariana Grande concert in May 2017 when she sustained unsurvivab­le injuries from the blast.

Yesterday the inquiry, sitting in Manchester, began to look at how and in what circumstan­ces each of the 22 victims died and to consider if any inadequaci­es in the emergency response contribute­d to individual deaths and/ or if they could have been prevented.

Evidence was heard about the movements on the night of Ms Boyle, as well as York couple Marcin, 42, and Angelika Klis, 39, who were killed as they waited to collect their daughters Alex, then aged 20, and Patrycja, then 14.

Ms Boyle’s mother, Deborah Hutchinson, comforted her daughter Nicole in the courtroom as they listened to the evidence, along with Ms Boyle’s aunt Andrea Hope.

Ms Boyle had just gained first-class honours in her first-year exams in criminolog­y with psychology at Leeds Beckett University and was “loving life” as a student, the inquiry heard.

She went to the arena with her sister, her mother, her mother’s partner Philip Tron, 32, who was also among the blast victims, and Mr Tron’s mother June.

Ms Boyle and Mr Tron went inside to collect Nicole, entering the City Room at 10.22pm where they stood near a merchandis­e stand.

She was about four metres away from bomber Salman Abedi when he detonated his device at 10.31pm.

A member of the public told the inquiry that when they checked on Ms Boyle seven minutes later, she was not moving or showing any signs of life.

An advanced paramedic knelt next to Ms Boyle at 11.38pm and placed a label on her to identify her as deceased.

A post-mortem examinatio­n recorded a medical cause of death as multiple injuries.

Forensic pathologis­ts and blast wave experts agreed her injuries were unsurvivab­le with current advanced medical treatment.

Addressing the family, inquiry chairman Sir John Saunders said: “Thank you for attending. Courtney was talented, hard-working and would have had a successful and fulfilling life.

“As we have heard, after her death the news came through that she had gained first class honours in her firstyear exams at university.

“Ironically she wanted to be a criminal psychologi­st, a dream she would never realise. However good she became as a criminal psychologi­st, I doubt she would have been able to understand the cruel criminal act that so tragically took her life.”

The inquiry continues today.

 ??  ?? Manchester Arena bombing victim Courtney Boyle
Manchester Arena bombing victim Courtney Boyle

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