Tommy Taylor-Mclean, seven months old, or Huntsman Drive at Upminster, fell out of a bed on the first day of a family trip to the Caribbean island or Santa Lucía, as he has heard the court of the forensic of eastern London.
The tragic death of Havering To spoke in a hospital on the island on April 2.
An investigation was opened at Walthamstow on Wednesday, April 9, after his body was repatriated to the United Kingdom.
The Forensic Senior Graeme Irvine said he would ask the Office of Foreign Development, of the Commonwealth (FCDO) to help obtain key evidence gathered by the authorities of Santa Lucía.
“I will be very clear,” he told the court. “Forensic in England and Wales have legal powers to demand evidence of people and organizations. Unfortunately, these powers cease on the borders of England and Wales.
“I have to trust diplomatic channels to obtain evidence of foreign jurisdictions.”
Last year, the court learned two cases in which foreign states or companies refused to provide evidence.
The United Arab Emirates refused to deliver the investigation reports on the death of a lawyer in northern London, and the ring of the Timbre Video Company refused to publish important images of a shooting in the Police of Eastern London.
An online fund collection page in the baby Tommy’s memory has so far collected more than £ 12,600 for the Santa Lucía hospital that treated it.
He described him as “the best child” that “brought so much joy and happiness to everything with him.”
“We are totally lost without him, but he comforts us to know the amount of lives he played in the short time he was with us,” said a statement attributed to his parents Hannah and Matt.
The details that Mr. Irvine had of the case until now had come from the repatriation documents provided by funeral directors, he told the court last week.
“He said Tommy had been on vacation with his parents,” he said.
“They had arrived in Santa Lucia on March and early on the trip that Tommy had fallen from a bed and hurt.”
Initially, it seemed good, but then the condition deteriorated and required hospitalization.
He was treated by the St Jude hospital in Vieux Fort, where it was discovered that he had suffered bleeding in the brain.
The online fund collection page praised the “wonderful doctors” who treated him.
“All staff treated Tommy with such care and compassion, but unfortunately there were no resources to operate in Tommy,” he said.
“We would love to raise money for the pediatric room to help other children.
“Unfortunately, our baby Tommy lost his life, but we would love to try to help other children and babies in the future, in honor of our beautiful son. He will live forever in our hearts and minds.”
“It seems that a post mortem exam was performed in Santa Lucía,” Irvine told the opening of the investigation.
“The total scope of that investigation has not revealed the leg to the court.”
A pediatric autopsy ordered by Mr. Irvine has not resulted in a provisional cause of death. Other laboratory tests had ordered.
“It seems to me that this is a tragic set of circumstances and I want to offer my condolences to Tommy’s parents for their tragic loss,” Irvine said.
“It seems that the circumstances of Tommy’s fall have not resulted in any criminal investigation in Santa Lucía. It should make that absolutely clear.”
He said that “the unfortunate delays that take place in the provision of Post Mortem Pediatric Reports” meant that Tommy’s final research would have to schedule towards the end of the year, on November 24.
“That causes me a real group,” said the coroner. “It seems to me that it will cause significant discomfort for the family and I am very sorry for that.”