writes John Hawkins. Despite extensive investigations by police and a variety of medical experts, as well as DNA checks across Europe, nothing has been found to establish who the man was or how he came to die on Earl Bathurst s 15,000 acre Cirencester Park Estate. Yesterday the assistant Gloucestershire Coroner, Roland Wooderson, drew a line under the investigation by conducting an inquest in the absence of almost all the information that is usually considered at such a hearing. He read through police and medical reports which told him that the mystery man s remains were found on May 1, 2018, by a forestry worker checking tree safety in a beech copse at the edge of the estate near Two Mile Lodge, alongside the A419 road between Cirencester and Stroud.
writes John Hawkins. Despite extensive investigations by police and a variety of medical experts, as well as DNA checks across Europe, nothing has been found to establish who the man was or how he came to die on Earl Bathurst s 15,000 acre Cirencester Park Estate. Yesterday the assistant Gloucestershire Coroner, Roland Wooderson, drew a line under the investigation by conducting an inquest in the absence of almost all the information that is usually considered at such a hearing. He read through police and medical reports which told him that the mystery man s remains were found on May 1, 2018, by a forestry worker checking tree safety in a beech copse at the edge of the estate near Two Mile Lodge, alongside the A419 road between Cirencester and Stroud.