Coronial
VICother

Finding into death of Gary Witcombe

Deceased

Gary WITCOMBE

Demographics

60y, male

Date of death

2009-01-18

Finding date

2011-04-03

Cause of death

Neck injury, specifically fracture of the odontoid peg of the second cervical vertebra and associated cervical spinal cord damage

AI-generated summary

Gary Witcombe, a 60-year-old man, died from a fractured odontoid peg of the second cervical vertebra with associated spinal cord damage sustained during a physical altercation at a family birthday party. The injury caused immediate loss of consciousness and respiratory arrest. Despite prompt bystander CPR and paramedic resuscitation, he could not be revived. The coroner found insufficient evidence to determine the specific mechanism causing the hyperflexion injury—whether from a punch, fall, or headlock—though considerable force was required. Blood alcohol content of 0.12% indicated intoxication. The clinical lesson is recognition that neck injuries from blunt trauma can cause catastrophic spinal cord damage with rapid deterioration; however, this death occurred in a non-medical setting with no preventable medical factors identified.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.

Contributing factors

  • Alcohol intoxication
  • Physical altercation with blunt force trauma to neck
  • Hyperflexion injury to cervical spine
Full text

Source and disclaimer

This page reproduces or summarises information from publicly available findings published by Australian coroners' courts. Coronial is an independent educational resource and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any coronial court or government body.

Content may be incomplete, reformatted, or summarised. All court orders for redaction and non-publication are respected; documents with technically defective redaction have been excluded from the database entirely. Always refer to the original court publication for the authoritative record.

Copyright in original materials remains with the relevant government jurisdiction. AI-generated summaries and tagging are for educational purposes only, may contain inaccuracies, and must not be treated as legal documents. We welcome feedback for correction —