🔥 “TRAPPED HEAD-FIRST BETWEEN ROCKS 😢🌊” Woman Drowned In Suffolk As Rescue ‘Ignored Guidance’ Over SHOCK Safety Fears

An inquest has heard that rescue efforts to save 32-year-old Saffron Cole-Nottage, who became trapped in sea defence rocks, did not follow guidance

Saffron Cole-Nottage, 32

Saffron Cole-Nottage was from Lowestoft, Suffolk (Image: Facebook)

Rescue efforts to save a mum trapped headfirst in sea defence rocks did not follow guidance, an inquest has heard.

Saffron Cole-Nottage, 32, died after falling in Lowestoft, Suffolk, while walking her dog on The Esplanade on February 2 last year.

An initial 999 call was made at 7.52pm and a paramedic arrived at the scene at 8.10pm. At 8.13pm, police were informed by the ambulance service that it was believed to be a body recovery operation. Her medical cause of death was later recorded as drowning.

Professor Richard Lyon, a consultant in emergency medicine, told an inquest in Ipswich on Tuesday that a clock should start on 30 minutes of rescue efforts once a responder arrives at the scene and confirms a person is submerged.

Floral tributes on on Lowestoft seafront near where Saffron Cole-Nottage died

Floral tributes left at the scene for Saffron Cole-Nottage in February 2025(Image: EADT / SWNS)

Prof Lyon, who holds roles with NHS Scotland and the University of Surrey, said: “I do not think the guidance was followed in this case.”

He said: “The guidance is quite clear that the clock starts when the responder arrives on scene … and submersion is confirmed.” He questioned “how sure the responders could be that Saffron was actually confirmed submerged when that decision [at 8.13pm] seemed to have been made from above the railings when she [Ms Cole-Nottage] was down in a difficult situation”.

Prof Lyon said it was “important to have an absolute time that everyone is working to and that time is sure and that’s definite”. “That’s why the guidance is very clear that the time should be from the arrival of the first rescuer – there’s no ambiguity about that time,” he said. “The whole purpose of the guideline is to maximise the chance of a lifesaving rescue.”

He cautioned that information on timings from a bystander may be “inaccurate” and should not be relied on, adding: “This is a stressful situation for a bystander.” He said there could be an “air pocket”. “The initial focus is always on rescue, it’s always to maximise the chance of a successful outcome,” he said.

Floral tributes on on Lowestoft seafront near where Saffron Cole-Nottage died

The tragedy took place while Ms Cole-Nottage was walking her dog along a narrow path close to The Esplanade(Image: EADT / SWNS)

Prof Lyon said the length of time a person could survive while submerged depended on factors including age, physiology and environmental conditions.

He said a submerged person would initially attempt to hold their breath, which may last “a minute or two”. He said the person would then take a breath and water would enter the mouth and upper airway before they would eventually stop breathing and their heart would stop.

Prof Lyon estimated Ms Cole-Nottage’s window for “probable survival” was around five minutes after submersion began. He added that being upside down would have made breathing “harder”.

The inquest previously heard that a blood alcohol level of 271 milligrammes per 100ml was recorded for Ms Cole-Nottage. The legal limit for driving in England is 80 milligrammes per 100 millilitres of blood.

Prof Lyon said the effect of the alcohol is “most relevant in terms of it would make her more likely to stumble, more likely to trip”. He said Ms Cole-Nottage’s “protective reflex would have been diminished”, meaning she may not have put an arm out as she fell. “When she was between the rocks her ability to move … and try to push herself out would have been impaired as well,” he said.

Prof Lyon said: “For Saffron to have had a probable survival, she would have needed to be rescued within five minutes of submersion and, if required, for CPR to start within that time.”

He said that “survival was possible up until about the 15-minute mark”, but she may have sustained a brain injury. “In my opinion, beyond 25 minutes, survival would not have been possible,” he said.

“I should stress, all of these numbers are a best possible expert opinion,” he added. The inquest continues.