Stephen George Moore, 69, was found dead at home in Butteridges Close in January.
The man’s body was discovered after the groups rose about their well -being, but the forensic court of eastern London did not listen to who he used was the alarm.
The Forensic Graeme Irvine opened an investigation into the death of Mr. Moore at the Walthamstow Justice Palace on Tuesday, April 22.
He described Mr. Moore as a former worker of the divorced council, but did not say what advice he had worked for.
Police and paramedics were called to the property on the afternoon of January 28, but the London Fire Brigade had to be called to open the door.
Inside, Mr. Moore, originally from Barking, was “found unanswered on the floor,” Irvine said.
He was declared dead at 3.42 pm
The Metropolitan Police Service sent death to the coroner for his investigation because “no clear cause of death in the scene could be determined.”
On January 30, an autopsy was performed, but also proved to be installed until the results of the toxicology tests were delivered.
After receiving those results, the pathologist Dr. Vasi Sundaresan gave the provisional cause of Moore’s death as ketoacidosis (a high level of acid in the blood), based on “dependence and chronic starvation of alcohol.”
Moore also had ischemic heart disease, which appeared as a contributing factor.
Mr. Irvine declared Mr. Moore’s family, the people interested in the case, a legal status that gives them the right to see evidence before the final investigation and the question that any witness called to testify, and asked them to supply a history, family, and, and family, that they have with respect to death. ”
Hey Ashked his staff to investigate whether Moore had been receiving some treatment for alcohol dependence.
The final research was listed for September.