Here’s the latest on the Nottingham inquiry based on publicly available updates up to early 2026.
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What it is: A judge-led public inquiry into the June 2023 Nottingham attacks, examining how the incident unfolded and whether authorities could have acted differently. The inquiry aims to scrutinise multiple agencies and obtain answers for the victims’ families and the public. This remains the central framework of the investigation.[1][3][9]
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Key milestones to date:
- In early 2025, the inquiry was verbally described as starting within weeks, with a statutory public inquiry empowered to compel witnesses and evidence. This signalled the formal initiation of proceedings and the intention to call witnesses under legal powers.[3][1]
- By February 2026, hearings had begun, with the inquiry actively taking evidence and examining the responses of authorities, the police, and other agencies involved in or surrounding the events. This marked the transition from planning to live proceedings.[2][9]
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What the inquiry is examining:
- The primary focus is on the three victims (Barnaby Webber, Grace O’Malley-Kumar, and Ian Coates) and the broader response by emergency services and authorities. The inquiry is also considering whether there were missed opportunities or failures in the government, police, and health/care responses, and it has the power to compel witnesses and undisclosed documents.[9][1][2]
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How to follow the proceedings:
- Updates are regularly broadcast by major UK outlets (Sky News, BBC live blogs, ITV) with ongoing coverage of hearing days, witness testimony, and any new disclosures. If you want the most current day-by-day developments, checking BBC live updates, Sky News, and ITV News around Nottingham inquiry coverage is advised.[1][3][9]
Illustration (example viewpoint):
- Imagine the inquiry as a courtroom-style audit of how a city’s emergency response “documented and reacted” during a crisis, with witnesses from police, health services, local authorities, and government giving testimony, and with the judge empowered to call documents and compel answers. This helps victims’ families understand what happened and why, and it can lead to concrete recommendations to prevent recurrence.[2][1]
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent day-by-day hearing notes or summarize recent witness testimony in plain language, and I can also provide links to the latest official updates. Please tell me which format you prefer (brief summary, timeline, or a bullet-point briefing).[9]