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Article 2 inquests arise where there is a credible concern that the state may have failed to protect
the right to life, triggering an enhanced investigative duty. For solicitors acting for families, public bodies, or
other interested persons, these cases often turn on whether the evidence properly addresses systemic or operational
failings, the foreseeability of risk, and the adequacy of protective steps. A well-structured expert report helps
the Coroner’s Court test what happened, why it happened, and whether the systems in place were fit for purpose.
When an Article 2 inquests report is required
A solicitor may need an Article 2 inquest report where death occurred in state custody (prison,
police detention, immigration detention, or detention under mental health powers), or where a person died in state
care and there is an arguable failure to respond to a known risk. These matters can also arise in “Middleton-type”
investigations where the inquest must explore not only the medical cause of death, but the broader circumstances and
decision-making that preceded it. In healthcare settings, Article 2 inquests are commonly considered
when there is a credible allegation of policy-level or structural failure, rather than a single isolated error.
What the expert assesses
The core purpose is to give the court a clear framework for understanding whether standards, processes, and responses
were adequate in light of known risks. In practice, an expert may analyse the foreseeability of the risk to life,
the adequacy of protective measures, whether omissions were avoidable, and whether the response met safeguarding
obligations. A strong Coroner’s Court Article 2 inquest report also distinguishes between individual
operational actions (what staff did or did not do) and systemic issues (policies, staffing, training, escalation
pathways, or clinical governance). This separation is often crucial in complex custody or care histories.
Systemic vs operational failures
One of the most important contributions of an Article 2 inquest report is disciplined categorisation.
Operational failings may include missed risk indicators, inadequate observations, ineffective escalation, failures to
follow care plans, or poor handover between agencies. Systemic failings may include under-resourcing, weak governance,
incomplete policies, fragmented multi-agency coordination, or predictable failures in investigation processes. In
Article 2 inquests, the court often needs this distinction to understand whether the death reflects
individual conduct, structural weaknesses, or both.
Investigation adequacy and safeguarding duties
Because the procedural obligation is central, experts may also consider whether internal reviews were timely, independent,
and capable of learning lessons. This can include review of incident reporting, root cause analysis, risk management,
and whether recommendations were meaningful and implemented. Where safeguarding duties apply, the report can clarify
whether the relevant processes were followed, whether risk was escalated appropriately, and whether protective planning
was realistic. For solicitors, this can be particularly valuable where disclosure reveals gaps between written policy
and actual practice.
How instructions work in practice
Our case managers review your brief and match the matter to the appropriate specialist (often human rights expertise,
forensic psychiatry, and/or clinical governance). Many Article 2 inquests are suitable for desktop
review, institutional audit, and remote conferencing, depending on the Coroner’s directions and the evidence required.
To move quickly, we typically ask for the inquest scope, key issues, chronology, relevant policies, disclosure bundle,
and any prior internal investigation materials. This allows the expert to produce a focused report that supports
questions, submissions, and hearing preparation.
What “good” looks like for solicitors
A report is most useful when it is readable, precise, and anchored to the issues the Coroner must determine. Our
Article 2 inquest report style prioritises short sections, clear reasoning, and unambiguous conclusions.
It should help you identify the decisive documents, the key moments where risk management diverged from expected practice,
and the practical questions that the inquest must test. Where appropriate, the report can also support proposed witness
questions and highlight what additional evidence would materially change the opinion.
If you need an urgent review for a custody or care fatality, we can assess suitability and propose the right expert
pathway for Article 2 inquests, including realistic timescales and a clear scope of work.
Article 2 inquest reports address the state’s enhanced procedural obligation to investigate deaths where there is a suspicion that the state may have failed to protect the right to life. These assessments focus on whether systemic or operational failures by state agents contributed to a fatality in custody or care.
Overview
When this report is required
Deaths in State Custody occur when an individual dies while detained in prison, police cells, or under the Mental Health Act
Suspected State Omissions arise when it is alleged that authorities failed to take reasonable steps to prevent a foreseeable risk to life
Middleton-type Inquests require an expanded conclusion that identifies “by what means and in what circumstances” the deceased came by their death
Healthcare Systemic Failures are investigated under Article 2 when structural or policy-level inadequacies in the NHS lead to a fatality
What the expert assesses
Foreseeability of the risk to life
Adequacy of protective measures implemented
Systemic vs individual operational failures
Compliance with statutory safeguarding duties
Effectiveness of state-led incident investigations
Report specification
Element
Detail
Assessment Setting
Desktop Review, Institutional Audit, Remote
Court Acceptance
Coroner’s Court
Compliance
CPR Part 35
CPR Part 35 Compliant
Digital Delivery
Urgent Instructions
Specialist expertise
Human Rights ExpertsForensic PsychiatristsClinical Governance Leads
While these are the primary specialists engaged for this instruction type, please note that every case turns on
its own facts. Complex or multi-disciplinary cases may require a bespoke team of experts. Our case managers will
review your specific instruction to ensure the correct clinical match.