Retired officer plotted âinaccurateâ map in Noah Donohoe investigation
Jurors at Belfast Coroners Court heard that Noahâs family believe the police âoverlooked issuesâ, including the location of his phone on the night he went missing
A retired PSNI officer has admitted plotting an âinaccurateâ location pin of Noah Donohoeâs phone after his last-known sighting but insisted it would not have helped police find the boy, an inquest has heard.
The 14-year-old had been planning to meet school friends at Cavehill, in north Belfast, after setting out on his bike on Sunday June 21 in 2020.
Jurors at Belfast Coroners Court heard that Noahâs family believe the police âoverlooked issuesâ, including the location of his phone on the night he went missing.
The schoolboy was captured on CCTV cycling through the city centre and then towards the north of the city.
In the last piece of footage of Noah before he disappeared, he is seen riding the bike naked.
His naked body was found in an underground water tunnel on June 27, six days after he left home.
A post-mortem examination found the likely cause of death was drowning.
On Thursday, the inquest â now in its 19th week â heard evidence from retired PSNI Detective Constable Wilson.
Mr Wilson, whose first name was not given, was a digital media investigator (DMI), acting as a âfirst point of contactâ for digital inquiries and was involved in the search of Noahâs Alcatel phone, which was found by a member of the public the day after Noahâs disappearance.
There was a police theory that Noah âthrew his phone into Castleton Park over the railingsâ while he was cycling on Sunday, the court heard.
However, Brenda Campbell KC, representing Noahâs mother Fiona Donohoe, said this was âentirely inconsistentâ with the data Mr Wilson was responsible for plotting.
Jurors heard that mobile phone data shows Noahâs phone travelled south of Castleton Park at 7.41pm on Sunday before being found back in the park the next day.
Mr Wilson did not flag this as an inconsistency with the police theory at the time because he had incorrectly plotted the location on the map, the court heard.
âI am forced to accept it is inaccurate, but not wildly inaccurate,â Mr Wilson said.
He added that the difference of âa couple of streetsâ does not change anything in the data and told the court âeverything that was possibleâ was done to try to find Noah.
Ms Campbell asked: âDid you not notice as the digital investigator that the location of Noahâs phone at 7.41pm was inconsistent with where the phone was recovered?â
âUsing the Chorus Maps, which weâve seen today, then it would have been consistent,â Mr Wilson said.
âBecause your location of Castleton Park was wrong,â Ms Campbell added.
She argued that âfurther investigationâ was warranted at the time into whether there was third-party involvement in Noahâs disappearance, telling Mr Wilson, âI donât suggest youâre the only one who overlooked issuesâ.
Ms Campbell asked: âWho did you tell that the information you had was entirely inconsistent with the police theory that Noah threw his phone into the park?â
Mr Wilson did not give a direct answer but eventually appeared to concede that, due to the location mix-up, he had not believed it was âinconsistentâ at the time.
He rejected the suggestion the police were acting âretroactivelyâ during the investigation.
âAll information that I believed could assist with finding Noah and finding Noah alive was brought to the investigation as a matter of priority and as a matter of urgency,â Mr Wilson said.
Returning to the suggestion that inconsistencies such as the location of the phone were not followed up, Ms Campbell said: âTo what extent did you even think about any of this when you got these maps?â
âLots,â Mr Wilson replied.
The inquest continues.
Source: https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/news/belfast-news/retired-officer-plotted-inaccurate-map-34108146


