An inquiry by a coroner into the cause of a death.
An official judicial inquiry into the cause of a person’s death: carried out when the death is sudden or takes place under suspicious circumstances. The results of medical and legal investigations that have been carried out are considered by a coroner, sitting with or without a jury, and made publicly known.
An official inquiry conducted by a coroner into the cause of an individual’s death. The coroner is a judicial officer who, when a death is sudden, unexpected or occurs in suspicious circumstances, considers the results of medical and legal investigation and, sitting with a jury or on his or her own, makes public the conclusions as to the cause of death. He/she has wide powers, and, in deaths of uncertain cause, no official death certificate can be issued without his or her approval. A coroner may be legally or medically qualified (or both). In Scotland the comparable officer is the procurator fiscal.
In legal medicine, an official examination and investigation into the cause, circumstance, and manner of sudden, unexpected, violent, or unexplained death.
An official investigation conducted by a coroner to determine the cause of death when it is unknown or suspected to be unnatural.
An investigation led by a coroner to determine the reason for a sudden or violent death. In situations of unexpected death, a doctor can’t provide a death certificate unless they had been attending to the patient for some time before the death and if the demise was anticipated as a normal outcome of the ailment they were treating.