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4 Kommentare
“The Metropolitan Police says an extensive investigation ruled out third-party involvement and that this conclusion was upheld at an inquest, but has apologised for aspects of how the case was handled.”
Grieving parents unable to accept what happened then.
The Met being terrible as usual, but this article doesn’t explain how he was found. It was a few hours later but the other guys weren’t said to have left the hotel. So it’s looking like he sadly accidentally overdosed.
What’s unsettling about the death of Ed Cornes isn’t just the unanswered questions about what happened in that hotel room, but how quickly the investigation appears to have settled on a familiar, simplifying story.
A 19-year-old student, barely days into university life, is found dead with 37 separate injuries and a mix of substances in his system, including GHB — a drug closely associated with impaired capacity and vulnerability. He was taken to the room by an older man while already heavily intoxicated, with another older man joining later. Friends say he was in no condition to make clear or informed decisions.
Those facts alone should have prompted a careful, open-ended inquiry.
Instead, the family described an approach shaped by assumptions about gay men – that intoxication, sexual risk and poor outcomes are simply expected, and therefore less in need of rigorous examination. In that framing, vulnerability becomes recklessness, and the significance of injuries, timing and power imbalance can slip into the background.
The mother’s experience reflects this. Rather than being supported in seeking clarity about her son’s death, she encountered an investigative lens that appeared to already “know” what had happened, without fully testing that narrative against the evidence. That isn’t just personally distressing; it erodes confidence in impartial policing.
Patterns and models can be useful in investigations, but only as starting points. When they harden into assumptions, they stop serving anyone. Objective investigations need to engage with the full nuance of an individual case – including injuries, capacity, context and prior behaviour. When that nuance is discounted, families are left without answers and the wider public interest is diminished.
Very sad.
Opened this article admittedly expecting a grieving parent struggling to come to terms with her child’s death but this entire thing reads suspicious.
He met a stranger, presumably off a dating app, and went to hotel where another man was waiting. Hours later, he was found dead with a common date rape drug in his system and 36 cuts and other injuries.
>The watchdog ordered a serious case review, which identified 27 failings. She says she has only been formally informed of one.
Have a feeling if this was a young girl it wouldn’t be getting dismissed offhandedly like this.