Inquest Told Soldier May Not Have Shot Herself
Alison Foster QC, representing the family of 18-year-old Cheryl
James, said: "Now there is distinguished pathological evidence showing
that the shot that killed Cheryl James may not have been self-inflicted.
"Third party involvement is more than merely speculative, according to this inquest's pathologist.
"It's important such evidence is fully acquired and assimilated."
She asked for the inquest to be delayed by a few weeks to allow "important" pathological evidence to be properly considered.
Private James died from a fatal gunshot wound on 27 November, 1995, at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey
The original inquest, in 1995, lasted only an hour and
recorded an open verdict which was quashed last year by High Court
judges who ordered a fresh inquest.
This new inquiry - at Woking Coroner's Court - will hear from 80 witnesses over a two-month period.
It will also hear evidence suggesting she may have been sexually abused by senior ranks shortly before her death.
Pte James was in the second phase of her training to join
the Army when she was found with a single bullet wound between her nose
and her right eye.
Her parents have always refused to accept the official
version of her death and fought hard for two decades to have a proper
inquest.
The family and their lawyers have protested that the
investigation should not have been carried out by the Army and key
witnesses were not interviewed.
Her clothing wasn't examined and some of it even went missing.
Her father, Des James, told Sky News earlier this month he just wanted "to get to the bottom of what happened, in every detail".
Four recruits died at Deepcut between 1995 and 2002, all in similar circumstances.
As well at Pte James, Privates Sean Benton, 20, James Collinson, 17, and Geoff Gray, 17, were found with gunshot wounds.
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