Drain where Noah Donohoe was found was in good condition, inquest hears

A director in the Department for Infrastructure said the culvert was ‘relatively uncomplicated’.
Drain where Noah Donohoe was found was in good condition, inquest hears

By Bairbre Holmes, Press Association

The storm drain where Noah Donohoe’s body was discovered was in good condition and had no history of unauthorised access, the inquest into the teenager’s death has heard.

Noah, a pupil at St Malachy’s College, was 14 when his naked body was found in a water tunnel in north Belfast on June 27th, 2020, six days after he left home on his bike to meet two friends in the Cavehill area of the city.

A post-mortem examination found the likely cause of death was drowning.

Jonathan McKee, a director in the Department for Infrastructure (DFI), appeared at the inquest, which is in its 14th week, on Thursday morning.

He said the drain was “relatively uncomplicated for a culvert in an urban area” and “was and is in good condition”.

 

He added that before June 2020 the DFI had “no record of members of the public or elected representatives reporting concerns” about the safety of a screen on the structure’s opening or about children or adults gathering at it.

There was no other evidence such as graffiti or litter to suggest the pipe had been accessed, he added and said local residents are “vigilant and alert”, which would discourage unauthorised access and anti-social behaviour.

McKee said it was not “an abandoned area of land, out of everyone’s view, susceptible to misuse or antisocial behaviour”.

On June 24th, 2020, after Noah’s disappearance, there was a report of unauthorised access to the drain.

An official was tasked with investigating and when he arrived he was told “approximately 50 to 60 youths” had “forced entry” to the area around the culvert opening and had searched the area, McKee said.

The official discovered the lock on a gate from the park to the area had been cut by “something like an angle grinder”. The court was shown a picture of the cut lock and an image of where it was found upstream from the inlet screen.

He replaced the lock on the gate and also put a lock on the inlet screen access hatch.

McKee also addressed the issue of why a screen covering the culvert was replaced after Noah’s disappearance.

He said the use of screens is typically discouraged as they can become blocked, creating a flood risk, and there is also a safety risk if anyone was to fall into water and become trapped by a screen.

He said when they are used, there are two different types: a security screen or a debris screen.

The screen on the Premier Drive Stream inlet had been changed from a debris screen to a security screen after Noah’s death because of the installation of new valves in the culvert.

“It is important to be absolutely clear the installation of security screens was not as a result of Noah’s death,” McKee said.

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