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‘Our daughter, 12, died playing in the park after council failed to do job properly’

News RoomBy News RoomApril 22, 2026
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The heartbreaking and preventable death of twelve-year-old Brooke Wiggins in Banstead, Surrey, on November 9, 2024, has laid bare a devastating chain of failures. Just days shy of her thirteenth birthday, Brooke was enjoying a simple, childhood pleasure—playing on a rope swing with friends—when tragedy struck. A branch from the tree snapped and struck her, causing fatal injuries. An inquest at the South London Coroner’s Court would soon reveal that this was not merely a freak accident, but a profound systemic failure. The tree was under the maintenance responsibility of Surrey County Council, which had a clear policy mandating the removal of such rope swings within seven days of identification. Furthermore, the council’s own inspection schedule, which called for a re-examination of the tree in May 2024, was not carried out. This omission created a void in safety oversight, one that would prove fatal.

In the stark, formal setting of the coroner’s court, the human cost of these procedural lapses was voiced by a grieving father. Lee Wiggins’s statement, read by Assistant Coroner Ivor Collett, pierced the legal technicalities with raw anguish. “Only 12 years old, and now she’s gone forever,” he said. His words framed the central, unbearable question of the case: “If only people had done their job properly… the one thing they are paid to do, and did it properly, Brooke would still be here.” This sentiment transforms the incident from a statistic into a story of profound negligence. Representing Mr. Wiggins, Christian Weaver argued compellingly that had the scheduled inspection occurred, the swing would have been identified and removed “as per policy,” a position corroborated by Gordon Carson of the Health and Safety Executive. The council’s inaction, therefore, stands in direct contrast to a family’s irreversible loss.

Brooke was far more than a case file; she was a vibrant, beloved individual whose absence has left an unfillable void. Her father remembered her as an “amazing young woman,” describing her as “bright” and “very funny.” He shared, “I am devastated that my baby girl has been taken from me. She packed so much into her short life.” This portrait was lovingly echoed by her mother, Claire Etherington, who in her statement celebrated Brooke as a “beautiful, fun, caring and loving girl” who possessed “the most incredible way of lighting up every room.” Brooke’s interests painted a picture of a creative and expressive soul; she loved dancing, art, singing, and photography. She was, as her mother noted, “a smart girl with so much potential,” making the loss not only of a beloved child but of a future unknown. “We will always wonder what she would have gone on to achieve in her life,” her mother said, a sentiment that captures the particular cruelty of a life cut so tragically short.

In response to the allegations, representatives for Surrey County Council presented a defense that has likely offered little solace to the grieving family. They contended that expert evidence suggested an inspection of the tree might not have led to a “materially different outcome.” This technical argument, focusing on the specific condition of the tree at an unknown point, seems to clash with the council’s own acknowledged duty of care and its clear policy regarding the proactive removal of hazardous rope swings. The defense raises a troubling question about accountability: if a policy exists to prevent danger, but its execution is delayed or avoided, can an organization be absolved because the danger might have been missed? For Brooke’s family, the logic is painfully simple: the policy was not followed, the inspection did not happen, and their daughter is gone.

The ongoing inquest serves as a crucial, if agonizing, process for the Wiggins family—a formal endeavor to piece together the exact sequence of failures and to assign responsibility. It is a search for answers in a void of uncertainty and pain. Beyond the quest for personal closure, this case casts a glaring light on the vital importance of rigorous and timely maintenance in public spaces, especially those where children play. It underscores that bureaucratic schedules and safety protocols are not mere paperwork; they are lifelines. When they are treated as optional or deprioritized, the consequences can be, as this case tragically demonstrates, absolute and irreversible.

Ultimately, the story of Brooke Wiggins is a poignant and urgent call to action. It is a reminder that behind every policy deadline and inspection checklist is the potential to protect a life full of promise. Her memory, as a bright, funny, and artistic girl, now stands as a testament to the profound cost of negligence. The hope for her family, and for the community, is that this profound loss will lead to stringent reforms and unwavering commitment from authorities to ensure that such a preventable tragedy never claims another young life. Her story must become a catalyst for change, so that the joy of a child on a swing is never again shadowed by such a fatal failure of responsibility.

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