• Photo
British singer Amy Winehouse performs at Lollapalooza

In this Aug. 5, 2007 file photo, British singer Amy Winehouse performs at Lollapalooza at Grant Park in Chicago. (AP Photo/Brian Kersey, File)

  • More Featured Content
Happy Hour | Sunshine Sangria
Happy Hour | Sunshine Sangria

Whether you are gathering a small group for weekend or throwing…

Travel: Top 10 beaches in the US
Travel: Top 10 beaches in the US

This may be hard to believe in the aftermath of Superstorm …

Photos: I-5 bridge collapses in Washington
Photos: I-5 bridge collapses in Wash.

An Interstate 5 bridge over a river collapsed north of Seattle,…

A week of top AP photos - May 16-23
A week of top AP photos - May 16-23

This gallery contains photos published May 16-23, 2013.

I-5 bridge collapse survivor: 'You hold on'
Bridge collapse survivor: 'You hold on'

Dan Sligh and his wife were in their pickup truck on Interstate…

Advertisement

Amy Winehouse inquest to be heard again

Family had not requested a new hearing

Updated: Monday, 17 Dec 2012, 12:13 PM EST
Published : Monday, 17 Dec 2012, 9:57 AM EST

LONDON (AP) — The inquest into the death of soul singer Amy Winehouse was overseen by a coroner who lacked the proper qualifications and must be heard again next month, officials said Monday.

Assistant deputy coroner Suzanne Greenaway, who handled the inquest, resigned in November 2011 after her qualifications were questioned.

Camden Council said a new hearing has been scheduled on Jan. 8.

"The inquest into the death of Amy Winehouse had not technically been heard," it said in a statement.

Winehouse was found dead in her London home in July 2011 at age 27. In an inquest in October 2011, Greenaway ruled that the "Back to Black" singer had died of accidental alcohol poisoning.

Greenaway had been appointed an assistant deputy coroner in London in 2009 by her husband, Andrew Reid, the coroner for inner north London. But she resigned after authorities learned she had not been a registered U.K. lawyer for five years as required by the rules.

She had practiced law for a decade in her native Australia.

Reid was suspended, and he resigned earlier this month.

Winehouse family spokesman Chris Goodman said Monday that the singer's family had not requested a new hearing.

Last year's inquest heard evidence from a pathologist, Winehouse's doctor, the security guard who found her and a detective who described seeing three empty vodka bottles in her bedroom. It appears unlikely that a second inquest would produce a different conclusion about how she died.

  • Comment Privately

Comment to 24 Hour News 8

Don't have a Facebook account? Or don't want to share something publicly? Email us here.

Report a comment

See a comment that should be moderated? Fill out the form here and tell us why.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Advertisement