Originally posted by GUT
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I don't believe copies of the depositions were sent to the police.
From the Coroners Act, 1887, s.4(2):
'It shall be the duty of the coroner in a case of murder or manslaughter to put into writing the statement on oath of those who know the facts and circumstances of the case, or so much of such statements as is material, and any such deposition shall be signed by the witness and also by the coroner.
The coroner should where possible follow the precise expressions of the witness in the first person. The depositions are afterwards forwarded under section 5 to the proper officer of the court in which the trial is to be, and copies supplied, upon payment, to the person charged in the inquisition, if he requires them.'
Section 5 states:
'The coroner shall deliver the inquisition, depositions and recognizances, with a certificate under his hand that the same have been taken before him to the proper officer of the Court in which the trial is to be, before or at the opening of the Court....In cases other than murder or manslaughter the inquisition remains in the custody of the coroner, unless required by the clerk of the peace as a voucher. And if the director of public prosecutions gives notice to the coroner that he has undertaken criminal proceedings, he must transmit the inquisition to him. By a circular from the Home Office in September 1884, coroners were requested, in all cases in which a verdict of manslaughter or murder should be returned, to send a copy of the depositions to the director of public prosecutions with or without any remarks which the coroner might think fit to offer.'
As a result of the above, when a person was tried for murder or manslaughter at the Old Bailey, the inquest papers were sent to clerk of the arraigns at the Central Criminal Court. The National Archives holds selected murder and manslaughter files from the Central Criminal Court under the CRIM series so that in some cases the original papers from certain Baxter inquests have survived (and it's where I obtained the papers from the Eliza Roberts inquest).
I'm not aware if any copies sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions have survived.
When I say that the depositions were not verbatim accounts of what a witness said, I mean that with the following type of question and answer - "Q. Did you know the deceased. A. Yes." - this would be recorded in the deposition as: "I knew the deceased", which is not what the witness actually said.
While the depositions should be fairly accurate accounts of evidence given by witnesses (albeit not verbatim) one will often find much more information about inquest proceedings in newspaper reports than in the original inquest papers, such as, for example, comments by the coroner to the witnesses and/or jury. This is important because some people seem to think newspaper reports should be disregarded and that the original inquest papers would have all the answers but this is not necessarily true.
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