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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Amy Fenton & Chiara Fiorillo

Loyal dog refused to leave riverbank after 'best friend' owner fell in and drowned

A loyal dog refused to leave a riverbank after his owner entered the water and drowned.

Nicholas Degraff, 23, was reported missing on December 12 last year after his dog, Leah the Alsatian, was found at the side of the River Derwent.

The man had spent the previous night with friends and was last seen on CCTV at 5.17am walking his dog through Great Clifton, Cumbria.

A search was launched and he was found five weeks later, on January 21, in the sea at the Port of Workington.

An inquest held today at Cockermouth Coroner's Court heard that Leah was found at the side of the River Derwent by walkers just before 12.36pm on December 12, reports Lancs Live.

The dog was said to be "barking at the river and eager to stay" by the bank where an entry point into the water was visible.

The rope Nic had used as a dog lead was found in the water.

A police investigation was launched, with Nic being spotted on CCTV in Great Clifton after being shown a route back to his home in Oxford Street by a man called Brian Park.

Nic's Snapchat account last registered its location at the riverbank and his bank card and mobile phone were not used after that date.

Detective Inspector Hayley Wilkinson, of West Cumbria CID, said she was called to the Prince of Wales Dock in Workington at 11.36am on Friday, January 21, after a dredger operating in the port had picked up "half of a body".

The River Derwent in Cockermouth, Cumbria (James Maloney/Lancs Live)

"The lower half of a body wearing black jogging bottoms and black work boots had been found [in the hopper]," DI Wilkinson said.

Nic's mum Hilary, who attended the inquest alongside his dad Malcolm and their daughter Charlotte, said in a statement that her son had been a "cheeky and happy little boy" as a youngster.

She said: "He had a passion for cars and was renovating an old classic car with his dad which they took to car shows.

"All his life he wanted a German Shepherd dog and in 2018 he brought Leah home who became his best friend and they both went everywhere together."

Post mortem toxicology tests revealed that Nic had some alcohol and cocaine in his system. The medical cause of death was given as immersion.

Returning a narrative conclusion, Coroner Kirsty Gomersal described Nic's death as "a mystery" and said: "There's only Leah that can really tell us that - if only dogs could talk.

"That is the greatest mystery of all - how did Nic come to be in the river is a mystery and that is something only Leah would be able to tell us."

Speaking to CumbriaLive ahead of Nic's funeral in February, his sister Charlotte said she would remember her brother for his "fun-loving, cheeky and mischievous attitude".

She added: "He was really loud, he used to say things like 'you'll never guess what's happened but I didn't do anything or it wasn't my fault'.

"Just his stories that used to make me cringe at the best of times. But he used to come home and he would always have a story."

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