Crime

Questions about Inquest so long after Marie Kuhnla’s Death

Published

on

By Dana Malcolm

Staff Writer

 

#TurksandCaicos, June 16, 2022 – A coroner’s inquest is a legal inquiry into the cause and circumstances of a death; and the Turks and Caicos Government at the start of the month opened one into the death of Marie Kuhnla. She was a tourist from Long Island who was found dead on the property of Club Med in 2018. The question is why now?

Kuhnla’s family says they think it’s a stalling tool intended to derail a ten million dollar wrongful death  lawsuit filed against Club Med or a way to save face.

A seven member jury was formed to listen to evidence in the inquest.  Under UK law a jury is convened for a coroner’s inquest under specific circumstances including:

  • the death was unnatural;
  • the death was sudden or unexpected; or,
  • the death was in other suspicious circumstances.

The reasons behind the inquest remain murky and no communication ha come immediately from the Government about the incident; at least not until the inquest concluded.

So for days on end, there was no explanation about why the coroner’s inquest was opened so long after the death.

What is clear though is that the TCI court system finds the case important enough to warrant spending money and putting resources behind reopening what happened to Kuhnla.

Attorney General for the Turks and Caicos Rhondalee Braithwaite Knowles told Magnetic Media she intended to make a statement at ‘the appropriate time’ but could not do so now because the matter was under judicial consideration and it ‘would not be appropriate to comment’. It is not unusual that matters under judicial consideration restrict comment from the judiciary.

Kuhnla’s family attorney, Abe George told I-Team, an NBC  Media team on island covering the inquest, “They suggested essentially that Marie Khunla tripped and fell into the sand and killed herself which is the most ludicrous theory based off the evidence we have seen,” said George.

The coroner in the case is sticking to his initial findings which say Marie was murdered by manual strangulation, he also leveled accusations of criminal liability against an unnamed morgue employee who he said intentionally “decided that she was going to place this specific decedent (Kuhnla) under a heated exhaust fan” the coroner says this was not appropriate treatment.

No viable DNA could be recovered from a rape kit performed on Marie Kuhnla’s body when the coroner arrived.

Her son has described the inquest as a “sham” and “rubbing salt in the wound”

On June 7th, Susan Wallace the investigative journalist covering the event said NBC news NY had been refused virtual access to the trial after covering in person.

TRENDING

Exit mobile version