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Morgue woman inquiry hit by 'complications'

Clare Garner
Tuesday 09 January 1996 00:02 GMT
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CLARE GARNER

The circumstances surrounding the case of Daphne Banks, the woman discovered alive in a hospital mortuary, were "very complicated", and were taking longer to investigate than expected, the local health authority said last night.

The Cambridge and Huntingdon Health Commission intended to issue a full statement yesterday, but it said the inquiry was inconclusive and any statement would be delayed until tomorrow.

"This case presents a complex set of circumstances which have required detailed fact-finding," said Diana Jakubowska, the commission's head of communication. "The need to establish more information and take further advice means that we are unable to give any other information at this time".

Mrs Banks, 61, who was pronounced dead on New Year's Eve and found to be alive only minutes before she was to be placed in a sealed body tray, was still recovering in Hinchingbrooke Hospital. Mrs Banks, who has three children, was saved by an undertaker, Ken Davison, 61, who saw a twitching varicose vein in her leg.

A hospital spokeswoman said: "Mrs Banks is progressing well but we don't yet know when she will be discharged." Mrs Banks's husband of 40 years, Claude Banks, 69, and her eldest daughter, Penny Young, 39, were due to visit her yesterday after attending the funeral of a family friend. Speaking from her parents' farm in Stonely, Cambridgeshire, Mrs Young said: "We just want mum to get home and all this to go away."

It was business as usual for Mr Davison yesterday. At the end of a day's work in St Neots he said: "I'm going to wait till Mrs Banks is better and out of hospital before I visit her.

"The first night I couldn't sleep, it just kept going through my head. We wanted to tell somebody but couldn't. Now I've got it off my chest I feel better."

The doctor who pronounced Mrs Banks dead has not been identified. The Medical Defence Union, which advises on its members on medico-legal issues, was handling inquiries on behalf of Dr David Roberts, the senior GP in Stonely.

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