Stephen John McBride, 40, or Woodbury Way, died a “team construction trip” organized by his company, leaving a wife and three children behind.
It was CEO set of a global recruitment firm called Discover International, with offices in London, Krakow, Mexico City, Barbados, Miami and Denver.
He had been director of the firm, which specialties in the life science industry, since 2013.
The death of Mr. McBride, on October 25, was sent to the Forensic Court of East London in Walthamstow after his body was repatriated to the United Kingdom from Bialka Tatrzanska.
The Forensic Graeme Irvine said he would have to ask the British government to contact the Polish authorities to obtain any evidence gathered by his police force.
He said that the knowledge of the case was currently limited to what was included in the “repatriation documents.”
“Mr. McBride was on a team construction trip with his employer, who has crimes in Poland, and the group was involved in a ski journey,” said the coroner on Friday (April 11).
The recruitment chief fell from a height in the resort.
“There seems to be no evidence that Mr. McBride’s actions were a deliberate act to end his life or cause him harm,” added the coroner.
A post -mortem exam on November 19 cools its cause of death as “multiple traumatic injuries” caused by a fall.
“Impositions to the Office of Foreign Development, of the Commonwealth (FCDO) to acquire for me any detail of any police investigation in Poland, any detail of any pathological investigation in Poland and any medical investigation in Poland,” Irvine said.
Forensic in England and Wales do not have the power to force the dissemination of evidence of any person or organization outside their own jurisdictions.
The family of Irvine Mad McBride “interested people” in the investigation, a legal status that gives them the right to access the evidence gathered by the court before holding the investigation, and questioning any witness called to give evidence.
The final research was provisionally scheduled for October 9.