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About INQUEST

INQUEST is a charity that provides a free advice service to bereaved people on contentious deaths and their investigation with a particular focus on deaths in custody. Casework also informs our research, parliamentary, campaigning and policy work.

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Thank you so much for your help, you really have shed some light on an issue that was really worrying me. Now I just have to get through the day itself. — Partner of young man who died from an overdose

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Corporate homicide law extended to prisons and police cells (The Guardian)

(The Guardian)

Campaigners for the families of those who die in custody believe the new law will provide extra protection for vulnerable individuals and at last inject some accountability into the system.

Helen Shaw, the co-director of INQUEST, the charity that works with families of those who die in custody, said: “While not all deaths in custody are a result of grossly negligent management failings that would lead to consideration of a corporate manslaughter prosecution many ofINQUEST ‘s cases have revealed a catalogue of failings in the treatment and care of vulnerable people in custody and raised issues of negligence, management failings and failures in the duty of care.

“The new provisions provide a new avenue to address these problems and will hopefully have a deterrent effect, preventing future deaths.

“We also welcome the government’s decision to extend these corporate manslaughter provisions to the UK Border Agency … this is a positive step towards greater accountability.”

INQUEST said that until now, there had been no successful prosecutions for deaths in custody, even in the 10 cases since 1990 where an inquest jury had returned an unlawful killing verdict.

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