'Full, frank and fearless' Deepcut probe into teenager's death promised
The second inquest into the death of teenage recruit Cheryl James opened on Monday.
By ITV News correspondent Juliet Bremner
The second inquest into the death of teenage recruit Cheryl James opened on Monday with a promise that it would be a "full, frank and fearless" investigation.
The 18-year-old's parents won a legal battle to hold a new inquest and present additional evidence into the possible reasons why she died at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey in November 1995.
But at the opening of the inquest, Judge Brian Barker sitting as coroner, said that he could not allow a wider inquiry in the culture at the base. He pointed out that it was his role to consider "how, not why " Pte James had died.
He promised there would be "a full, frank and fearless inquiry into the death of Cheryl James" but this would not look at allegations of sexual abuse and bullying that may have occurred before the night of her death.
The family had argued at pre-trial hearings that this could have contributed to Cheryl's state of mind and had hoped to introduce witnesses to testify about earlier experiences of abuse at Deepcut.