The Noah Donohoe Enigma: Shocking CCTV Revelations and Lingering Mysteries Dominate 2026 Inquest

By Crime and Courts Correspondent

BELFAST — More than five years after the tragic disappearance and death of 14-year-old schoolboy Noah Donohoe, the ongoing inquest at Belfast Coroner’s Court has reached a pivotal and deeply unsettling phase. Dramatic CCTV evidence presented in early 2026 has exposed significant gaps, timing discrepancies, and investigative oversights that continue to fuel public outrage and speculation. What began as a routine bike ride on June 21, 2020, ended in Noah’s naked body being discovered six days later in a storm drain culvert in north Belfast, with drowning confirmed as the cause of death. Yet the “lethal inconsistencies” in the footage of his final movements are leaving experts, legal teams, and observers in shock.

Live: Updates from Noah Donohoe inquest at Belfast Coroner's Court | Belfast Telegraph
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Live: Updates from Noah Donohoe inquest at Belfast Coroner’s Court | Belfast Telegraph

Noah, a pupil at St Malachy’s College, left his home on Fitzroy Avenue in south Belfast around 5:30 p.m. to meet friends in the Cavehill area. CCTV captured his initial journey: leaving home fully clothed, cycling through familiar streets, and heading north. Footage from various points, including the Ormeau Road and city centre, showed him progressing normally at first.

Noah Donohoe: CCTV shows teenager moments before last sighting
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Noah Donohoe: CCTV shows teenager moments before last sighting

However, anomalies emerged as the inquest jury viewed non-continuous clips totaling about nine minutes of his last known ride. One of the most haunting segments shows Noah in the north Belfast area near Northwood Road. A resident approached police the night after his disappearance with home CCTV footage depicting a naked youth—identified as Noah—cycling erratically, jumping off his bike, and running toward wasteland between houses. Constable Stuart Morrow testified that he viewed this on a mobile phone but did not immediately check for additional cameras in the vicinity or seize further recordings from the property, which had multiple devices. “I didn’t look up,” he admitted, highlighting a critical lapse in procedure.

Noah Donohoe inquest: Experts describe coroner's decision to make CCTV footage public as 'unusual' | Belfast Telegraph
belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Noah Donohoe inquest: Experts describe coroner’s decision to make CCTV footage public as ‘unusual’ | Belfast Telegraph

Further revelations exposed “gaps that don’t add up.” Police logs indicated CCTV checks at the Grove Leisure Centre returned “negative results” the day after Noah vanished, yet barrister Brenda Campbell KC demonstrated that Noah appeared on that footage at 6:01 p.m.—potentially missed because officers may have reviewed footage based on incorrect camera timestamps off by up to 43 minutes. “Basic policing” standards were not followed, the inquest heard, as real-time verification was overlooked during the critical first 24 hours.

Timing inconsistencies plague other collections: some footage gathered in 2020 wasn’t reviewed until 2022. Detective Sergeant Gardiner, who coordinated CCTV efforts, conceded police never obtained a complete picture of Noah’s movements, including why he turned right after leaving home or certain route segments lacking coverage. Questions arose about a “shadowy” exit from home and unexplained detours into unfamiliar areas, including a Protestant enclave far from his usual paths.

The inquest also examined coincidences, such as Noah cycling past a man later found with his laptop—discovered on the opposite side of the city. No interaction occurred, but the barrister described it as a “massive coincidence.” Police theories included voluntary disappearance due to a disturbed state of mind (possibly drug-related), a head injury from a bike fall captured on partial footage, or third-party involvement—though no conclusive evidence supports foul play.

Noah Donohoe's body found as 'quickly and safely' as possible, inquest told | Belfast Live
belfastlive.co.uk

Noah Donohoe’s body found as ‘quickly and safely’ as possible, inquest told | Belfast Live

Noah’s mother, Fiona Donohoe, has pushed for transparency throughout, with her legal team highlighting how earlier identification of key footage might have narrowed search areas and altered outcomes. A police search adviser estimated only a 5% chance Noah was in the culvert where he was found, influencing resource allocation under the hypothesis of voluntary absence.

Noah Donohoe inquest told storm drain 'could be easily opened'
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Noah Donohoe inquest told storm drain ‘could be easily opened’

Despite the evidence, conspiracy theories persist online and in communities, amplified by the case’s unresolved elements: discarded clothing, phone, and rucksack; Noah’s naked state; and investigative shortcomings. The jury has visited scenes along his route, viewing the culvert and pathways firsthand.

Jury cannot be reassured over officer's Noah Donohoe search claims, inquest told | Belfast Telegraph
belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Jury cannot be reassured over officer’s Noah Donohoe search claims, inquest told | Belfast Telegraph

As proceedings continue into March 2026, the inquest seeks to determine how and why this innocent boy’s final walk turned so tragically. Experts agree the CCTV discrepancies represent a “heartbreaking truth” about missed opportunities in a high-stakes missing persons case. For Noah’s family and a gripped public, closure remains elusive amid questions that may never fully resolve.

Noah Donohoe: Farewell to a boy 'just full of the joy of living' | Belfast Telegraph
belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Noah Donohoe: Farewell to a boy ‘just full of the joy of living’ | Belfast Telegraph

The world watches as this Belfast tragedy evolves from accident to enduring enigma, with CCTV once again at the centre of a soul-crushing mystery.