Inquests & Inquiries

Death in Custody

Expert forensic psychiatric evaluation of a Death in Custody — providing retrospective analysis of clinical risk management and the standard of care provided. Our specialists deliver urgent reports to support Article 2 inquests and legal proceedings.

Section 12 Approved Psychiatrists
CPR Part 35 Compliant
Urgent Reports Available

Expert Type

  • Forensic Psychiatrist
  • Consultant Psychiatrist
  • Forensic Psychologist
  • Medical Expert Witness

Applicable Law

  • Coroners and Justice Act 2009
  • Human Rights Act 1998 (Article 2)
  • Mental Health Act 1983
  • Prison Act 1952
  • Care Act 2014

When Needed

This assessment is critical during Article 2 Inquests or civil litigation following a fatality in state detention to evaluate psychiatric care and suicide prevention protocols.

What Is a Death in Custody Assessment?

A Death in Custody assessment is a retrospective clinical review conducted by a forensic expert to evaluate the mental health care provided to an individual prior to their death in a secure setting. Our experts scrutinise whether the duty of care was upheld and if the psychiatric management met the expected clinical benchmarks within the custodial environment.

These reports are essential for Article 2 Inquests, where the state’s obligation to protect life is under investigation. The expert examines the clinical risk assessments (such as ACCT processes) and determines if the identified risks were managed with appropriate forensic psychiatric oversight.

  • Article 2 Compliance — evaluating the procedural and substantive obligations to protect the right to life
  • Risk Assessment Validity — reviewing the adequacy of suicide and self-harm monitoring and intervention
  • Standard of Care — determining if the psychiatric treatment provided met professional clinical standards
  • Causation Analysis — assessing the link between clinical or systemic omissions and the fatal outcome
  • Systemic Failures — identifying institutional gaps in mental health provision within the secure estate
  • Policy Adherence — checking compliance with NICE guidelines and Ministry of Justice custodial protocols

Our experts are highly experienced in providing evidence for Coroners’ Courts, offering independent clarity on complex mental health presentations in secure settings. They help the Coroner and jury understand the interaction between custodial stressors and pre-existing psychiatric vulnerabilities.

The resulting expert report provides a robust foundation for Article 2 proceedings, focusing on the clinical facts and expert witness opinions necessary to assist the court in reaching a factual conclusion.

Key Assessment Components

Our assessment evaluates the following areas:

Retrospective Record Review

A comprehensive analysis of clinical records, custodial logs, and healthcare notes to reconstruct the deceased’s mental state.

Risk Management Evaluation

Assessing the adequacy of suicide and self-harm (ACCT) procedures and the response to known warning signs.

Policy & Guidance Comparison

Benchmarking the care provided against NICE guidelines and specific secure estate healthcare policies.

Staff Action Analysis

Evaluating the decisions and interventions made by healthcare professionals and custodial staff leading up to the death.

Causation Opinion

Providing an expert opinion on whether any clinical or systemic deficiencies may have materially contributed to the fatal outcome.

Prevention of Future Deaths

Identifying clinical improvements to assist the Coroner in drafting Regulation 28 reports to prevent similar tragedies.

Conditions That May Affect This Assessment

A range of psychiatric and psychological conditions can affect this assessment. These include:

Schizophrenia and Psychotic Disorders
Severe Depressive Disorders
Personality Disorders (EUPD/BPD)
Substance Misuse and Withdrawal
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Neurodevelopmental Disorders (ADHD/Autism)

The severity of these conditions is often heightened by the secure environment, necessitating specialized forensic psychiatric insights.

Assessment Process

  1. Instruction Received

    We receive instructions from solicitors or Coroners to review the circumstances of a death in detention.

  2. Expert Matched

    We match the case to a forensic psychiatrist or psychologist with specific expertise in custodial healthcare.

  3. Assessment Conducted

    The expert performs a detailed retrospective review of all medical, prison, and police records.

  4. Report Delivered

    A report prepared in accordance with applicable Coronial procedural rules is delivered, providing a clear clinical opinion for the Inquest.

Turnaround Times

Urgency Level Timescale
Standard Report 4-6 weeks from assessment
Priority Report 1-2 weeks
Urgent Report 1-4 days
We provide expedited Death in Custody reports to meet the demanding schedules of Coroners’ Courts.

What’s Included in the Report

Detailed chronology of psychiatric care
Analysis of suicide risk assessments
Evaluation of Article 2 obligations
Review of medication and treatment plans
Assessment of multi-disciplinary communication
Comparison with national clinical standards
Opinion on the avoidability of the death
Answers to specific Coronial questions
Professional opinion on clinical causation
Full Expert Witness declaration

All reports are prepared by specialists experienced in providing oral testimony at Article 2 Inquests. Where civil proceedings arise separately, additional procedural compliance can be addressed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Need a Death in Custody Report?

Contact us for a Death in Custody expert report. We provide CVs, fees, and confirmed turnaround times within 60 minutes.