Nora Anne’s case fingerprints didn’t match, research shows



[ad_1]

Nora Anne Quoirin was found dead nine days after disappearing at a resort near Seremban.

SEREMBAN: Today’s Forensic Court was informed that the police had asked the French authorities to provide 10 fingerprint samples from Nora Anne Quoirin to match some samples obtained by the investigating officer.

However, Puwira Jaya Othman, 56, Criminal Registry Assistant, Central Criminal Registry Malaysia and Singapore, Bukit Aman CID, said police only obtained two samples, namely the index and middle finger on August 13. of 2019.

She said the results of the comparison made by matching some fingerprint samples obtained on August 5 and 13 from the investigating officer, as well as the police fingerprint database, did not match those of Nora Anne.

Puwira Jaya, who is the 34th witness in the investigation process to determine the real cause of death of the French-Irish teenager, said this when he testified on the 14th of the process before the coroner Maimoonah Aid.

Earlier, the 33rd witness in the process, fingerprint examiner and criminal registration assistant from the same division, Rabidin Mohd Zin, 54, said fingerprints can last from several days to weeks, depending on the environment in the one that is discovered.

Nora, 15, disappeared on August 4 last year, a day after she and her family arrived in Malaysia for a two-week vacation at a resort in Pantai, about 60 kilometers south of Kuala Lumpur.

Nora’s body was found nine days later, on August 13, near a stream in a mountainous area, 2.5 km from the complex, after a massive search.

A preliminary post-mortem report revealed that there were no criminal elements in Nora’s death and that the teenager had died of gastrointestinal bleeding, due to prolonged stress and starvation.

Coroner Maimoonah postponed the procedure until November 11.

[ad_2]