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coronial

Coronial is an adjective relating to the office of the coroner or to coroners’ investigations. A coroner is an official responsible for examining certain deaths, particularly those that are sudden, unexplained, violent, or of public interest, and for reporting findings to authorities. The term and its associated processes are most commonly used in Commonwealth countries and other jurisdictions that maintain a coroner system.

Role and procedures: Coronial investigations aim to determine the cause of death and, in many cases, the

Jurisdiction and variation: Practice and terminology vary by country. In the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, Canada,

manner
of
death.
An
inquest
or
inquiry
may
be
held,
and
a
post-mortem
examination
is
often
conducted
as
part
of
the
investigation.
The
inquest
process
may
involve
the
examination
of
witnesses
and
evidence.
Outcomes
typically
include
a
verdict
on
the
cause
and
manner
of
death,
with
possible
verdicts
such
as
natural
causes,
accident,
suicide,
unlawful
killing,
or
open
verdict.
In
some
jurisdictions,
coronial
findings
may
also
lead
to
recommendations
intended
to
prevent
similar
deaths
in
the
future.
and
New
Zealand,
coroners
or
their
equivalents
oversee
coronial
investigations
and
inquests.
In
the
United
States,
death
investigations
are
conducted
by
coroners
or
medical
examiners,
with
significant
variation
across
states
and
local
jurisdictions.
Across
these
systems,
the
coronae
play
a
public-interest
role,
documenting
deaths
and
addressing
safety
or
policy
issues
that
arise
from
the
findings.