THE INQUEST has opened into the death of a woman who was found dead in a National Trust car park.
At Oxford Coroners Court today the head coroner for the county Darren Salter said he was opening the 'sad case' of Carole Elizabeth Wright, a 62-year-old retired woman who lived in Uxbridge.
He said she was married to Miles Wright, a South African financial adviser.
On October 23, she was found in Watlington Hill National Trust car park and Thames Valley Police officers verified her death at 5.57pm.
She was identified using DNA evidence.
A post-mortem report, which aims to establish her cause of death, is pending further investigation.
No date has been set for the inquest yet because it is a criminal case but a pre-inquest review is expected to be held in a few months.
Ms Wright's body was found in the National Trust woodland at around 5.53pm on Friday, October 23.
On Thursday last week Daniel O'Hara-Wright, of Regent Avenue, Hillingdon, was charged with her murder.
At the time police said that a 23-year-old had been in hospital in a 'serious but stable' condition.
O-Hara-Wright will next appear at Oxford Crown Court on January 8, 2021.
A provisional trial date has also been pencilled in for April 12 next year and is expected to last three weeks.
Detective Inspector Mike Roddy, of the Major Crime Unit, previously said: "Our condolences, thoughts and support is with the family of Carole Wright at this unimaginably traumatic time."
Thames Valley Police said her family continue to be supported by specially trained officers and the family have said they wish for their privacy to be respected at this time.
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