Inquest into Corrie McKeague's death won't look at police response
A preliminary hearing has been held
A coroner's told a hearing that the inquest into the death of Fife airman Corrie McKeague will not be a review of the police investigation.
The 23-year-old from Dunfermline vanished in the early hours of September 24 2016 after a night out in the Suffolk town of Bury St Edmunds.
Suffolk Police concluded that the RAF gunner climbed into a bin which was then tipped into a waste lorry.
He was reported missing at 3.42pm on September 26 by colleagues at RAF Honington and no trace of him has been found since.
Nigel Parsley, senior coroner for Suffolk, said that "reasons why alternative theories were ruled out by police'' will form part of the scope of the inquest, to be held in the presence of a jury at a date to be fixed.
He told a pre-inquest review hearing on Friday: "I'm very minded this will not become an inquiry into the police investigation.
"There has already been an independent review of the police investigation.
"The inquest is an inappropriate place for a further review.''
An independent review of the police investigation was completed by the East Midlands Special Operations Unit in 2017.
It concluded that the force completed a "thorough" investigation and explored all reasonable lines of inquiry.
Mr Parsley said the inquest will be listed for four weeks, with September 20 suggested as a provisional start date.
A further pre-inquest review hearing is to be listed ahead of the full inquest on a date to be fixed administratively.
Friday's hearing in Ipswich was attended remotely by Mr McKeague's mother Nicola Urquhart, while his father Martin McKeague, and his wife Trisha, attended in person.