A coroner is continuing his charge to the jury in the closing stages of a long-running inquest into the death of Belfast schoolboy Noah Donohoe.
Mr Justice Rooney started his lengthy summing up to the jury of eight men and two women on Thursday, during the 21st week of the inquest, which started in January.
He continued his charge to the jury on Monday morning, indicating that he hopes to finish it by the end of the day’s sitting.
It comes after almost six months of evidence at Belfast Coroner’s Court including 76 witnesses, statements from a further 42 people, as well as maps, video footage, photographs, police logs and expert reports.
Noah, a pupil at St Malachy’s College, was 14 when his naked body was found in the storm drain tunnel in north Belfast in June 2020, six days after he left home on his bike to meet two friends in the Cavehill area of the city.
CCTV evidence and witnesses show that Noah took a detour from his planned route, cycling instead along York Road and ended up on Northwood Road where it is suggested he entered the tunnel via a culvert behind a house.
The inquest was shown CCTV of Noah cycling naked along Northwood Road, and evidence that some residents heard noises including screams on the night of June 21 when Noah went missing.
A post-mortem examination found the cause of death was drowning.
The jury is charged with reaching findings including how Noah came by his death.
Noah’s mother Fiona Donohoe, who has led a high-profile campaign for answers around his death, has been present at Belfast Coroner’s Court for every day of the inquest.
On Thursday, Mr Justice Rooney reminded the jury that the process was a fact-finding inquiry into how Noah died, and not a criminal trial where someone is found guilty of an offence or found liable to pay damages, and not about finding fault, attributing blame or apportioning guilt.
He also cautioned the jury that they could not make a number of findings that there was no evidence to support.
These included that there was insufficient evidence to find that Noah was assaulted by a third party, that Noah was under the influence of drugs, that Noah was in a psychotic episode or acute mental illness, that he had taken his own life, that a third party was responsible for his death or that he was the victim of child exploitation.
He added that it was “not a failure” of the inquest process that they had reached a point where certain findings could not be made.