Plymouth's coroner spends his working life investigating the finer details of how people come to their deaths. "It's not as morbid as you might think", he tells SAM BLACKLEDGE.
IAN Arrow can still remember the first time he received a report of a death.
Working as an assistant deputy coroner in the early 1990s, Mr Arrow took a phone call from a doctor who said a woman had been chatting to her next-door neighbour over a hedge and had suddenly dropped down dead.
"I had to make a decision as to...
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