LONDON — One of the three women killed at their family home just north of London earlier this month was still alive with a crossbow bolt lodged in her chest when police arrived, an inquest heard Tuesday.
Following a 10-minute hearing, coroner Geoffrey Sullivan adjourned the inquest at Hertfordshire Coroner's Court in Hatfield to allow any criminal proceeding to proceed.
The women were the wife and two of the three daughters of John Hunt, a well-known horse racing commentator for BBC 5 Live, the corporation's news and sports radio channel.
The inquest heard that Carol Hunt, 61, died from stab wounds to her chest and abdomen, while Hannah, 28, and Louise, 25, died from crossbow bolt injuries on July 9.
It was revealed that Hannah Hunt managed to text an unnamed individual pleading for help and said she had been ''tied up'' at the family home in the quiet residential neighborhood of Bushey, northeast of the capital.
In the text she had asked the individual to call the police and tell them that the assailant was still in the house. She was subsequently able to call the police herself, reporting that she had been shot, as had her sister and mother. She was able to give her address before the call cut out.
When police arrived, they found Hannah still alive in the main doorway of the house.
Police launched a manhunt after arriving on the scene, and found the main suspect, 26-year-old Kyle Clifford, a day later in a cemetery a few miles east of the attack.