https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-64344896?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGAphotos
The family of a 17-year-old boy who was fatally stabbed have won their fight to have a fresh inquest into his death.
Joshua Molnar stabbed Yousef Makki with a knife during a row in Hale Barns, Greater Manchester, in March 2019. He was
cleared of manslaughter and murder.An inquest later ruled out both unlawful killing and accidental death and recorded a narrative conclusion.
Yousef's family were last year granted a judicial review, which has now quashed the original findings.
Alison Mutch, senior coroner for Greater Manchester South, had concluded she could not be sure of the "precise sequence of events" leading to Yousef's death.
But the High Court, sitting in Manchester, has rejected that conclusion.
Lady Justice Macur and Mr Justice Fordham handed down their ruling and directed a fresh inquest be held before a different coroner.
Yousef's family, from Burnage, Manchester, [size=inherit]
were granted permission for a judicial review[/size] last year.
They challenged Ms Mutch's assertion that there was insufficient evidence on the "central issue" of whether Yousef's killing had been unlawful.