Coronial
NSWother

Inquest into the disappearance and suspected death of Ninus Pedro Paul SCOGNAMIGLIO (n/a,PDF File)

Deceased

Ninus Pedro Paul Scognamiglio

Demographics

38y, male

Coroner

Decision ofDeputy State Coroner MacMahon

Date of death

1998-09

Finding date

2015-05-13

Cause of death

undetermined

AI-generated summary

Ninus Pedro Paul Scognamiglio, a male aged approximately 38 years, went missing around 6-8 September 1998 near Budgewoi, NSW. Despite a coronial investigation, the available evidence was insufficient to determine the manner and cause of death. The coroner was unable to reach definitive conclusions about what occurred. This case highlights the challenges in investigating deaths of missing persons where remains may not be located or where evidence is limited. For clinicians, this underscores the importance of thorough documentation and investigation protocols when individuals go missing, and the potential role of preventive health screening and monitoring for vulnerable populations.

AI-generated summary — refer to original finding for legal purposes. Report an inaccuracy.

Full text

CORONER’S COURT Ninus Pedro Paul SCOGNAMIGLIO Inquest: 13 May 2015 Hearing dates: 13 May 2015 Date of findings: Coroner’s Court, Glebe NSW 2037 Place of findings: Paul MacMahon Findings of: Deputy State Coroner CORONIAL LAW – Missing person suspected of being Catchwords: deceased 2013/152031 File number: Mr P. Bain – Coronial Advocate Representation:

Non-publication order made pursuant to Section 74(1)(b) Coroners Act 2009: Nil Findings made in accordance with Section 81(1) Coroners Act 2009: Ninus Pedro Paul Scognamigilo (also known as ‘Nino’) (born 12 April 1060) died on or about 6 - 8 September 1998 at or about Budgewoi in the State of New South Wales. As to the manner and cause of his death the evidence available does not enable me to make a finding.

Recommendations made in accordance with Section 82 (1) Coroners Act 2009: Nil Paul MacMahon Deputy State Coroner 13 May 2015

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. Some material may have been redacted or restricted by court order or privacy requirements. Always refer to the original court publication for the authoritative record.

Copyright in original materials remains with the relevant government jurisdiction. AI-generated summaries are for educational purposes only and must not be treated as legal documents. Report an inaccuracy.