“The crucial mistake police may have overlooked”: Noah Donohoe inquest hears CCTV time discrepancies may have impacted police spotting teen on fσσtage

Coverage of the Noah Donohoe inquest on Thursday as evidence is heard into the death of the Belfast schoolboy

The inquest into the death of Belfast teenager Noah Donohoe has resumed on Thursday with further evidence from a PSNI officer who was one of those involved in the first day of the missing person investigation.

The third week of the inquest came to a close as evidence from Detective Constable Keatley was heard throughout the day, in which she recalled her interactions with Fiona Donohoe and her actions in the first two days of the investigation.

The PSNI’s CCTV collection in the early days of the investigation also featured on Thursday, however Constable Keatley was not one of the officers who was assigned to the footage trawl.

The inquest heard from Ms Donohoe’s barrister that a sighting of Noah on a camera at Grove Leisure Centre may not have been spotted the day after he went missing as officers may have been looking at a period of time “40 minutes after Noah had passed” due to discrepancies with the camera system’s time.

Counsel for the PSNI informed the inquest that by Monday night, police had already identified Noah’s last known location of Northwood Park and had seen CCTV footage of him in the street cycling naked and dropping his bike.

Key evidence to date:

  • Statements from two of Noah’s close friends, who discussed their close friendship and plans to climb Cave Hill
  • Eyewitness statements of Noah on his final bike journey, including one who recalled seeing him ‘sway’
  • ‘Confusion’ over the PSNI’s head injury theory which investigator notes revealed were based on an eyewitness statement who said she didn’t see the boy hit his head
  • Details on access to the storm drain where Noah was found six days after he went missing
  • Eyewitnesses on Northwood Road who saw Noah cycling “totally naked” and another who recalled seeing his abandoned bike
  • Statement from a Northwood Parade resident who recalled hearing a “high-pitched scream” while residents on Premier Drive heard “two screams” and saw a “white light”
  • Evidence from a Premier Drive resident who recalled hearing someone trying her back door at 3am
  • Two police officers were questioned on their actions on the first day the teen went missing and the discovery of Noah’s phone

Our live blog keeps you up-to-date with all the latest from Belfast Coroner’s Court each day as questions surrounding the 14-year-old’s death aim to be answered.

Proceedings are on a break next week but will resume from Monday, February 16 at 10am.