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Marine Ashley Hicks' mountain fall death ruled accidental | |
(35 minutes later) | |
A Royal Marine died accidentally after falling 100ft (30m) on a training exercise in Snowdonia, a coroner has ruled. | |
Ashley Hicks, 25, plunged down a gorge while taking part in a special forces selection exercise in October 2012. | |
North West Wales deputy coroner Nicola Jones recorded the verdict at the hearing in Caernarfon. | |
A Navy spokesperson said an inquiry identified lessons to try and prevent another death in similar circumstances. | |
In a statement after the hearing, the spokesperson said: "Our thoughts remain with the friends and family of Marine Hicks." | |
The inquest heard from Soldier R, the SAS officer in charge of choosing new recruits, who said there was "the highest expectations" for Marine Hicks, from Solihull. | |
He fell down a steep gorge north of Llyn Trawsfynydd lake as he and his group tried to get to a safe point while being pursued by other soldiers. | |
He was in the top 10 students and the inquest heard that up to 250 people started each course and the pass rate was between 9-13%. | |
The officer said: "We would expect rather than hope someone of Ashley's quality would pass the course." | The officer said: "We would expect rather than hope someone of Ashley's quality would pass the course." |
He added: "Escape, evasion and survival are inherent skills a soldier must demonstrate to join this specialist unit." | He added: "Escape, evasion and survival are inherent skills a soldier must demonstrate to join this specialist unit." |
Giving evidence from behind a screen, Soldier N, who was in charge of the exercise and a member of the directing staff, said it was very difficult to identify the routes students would take. | |
Following Marine Hicks's death, an investigation was carried out by North Wales Police, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and the Land Accident Prevention and Investigation Team (LAIT). | |
After these investigations were finished, a Ministry of Defence Service inquiry was carried out which highlighted improvements in exercise planning and risk assessment. |