Noah Donohoe may have âlost touch with realityâ prior to death, inquest is told
However, jurors also heard a statement from a second expert who concluded âthere is no psychiatric explanation for Noahâs disappearance or deathâ
It is possible Noah Donohoe âhad lost touch with reality and was in a psychotic stateâ as he travelled through Belfast on the night of his disappearance, a psychologistâs statement that was read at the inquest into his death has said.
However, jurors at Belfast Coronerâs Court also heard a statement from another expert who concluded âthere is no psychiatric explanation for Noah Donohoeâs disappearance or deathâ.
The 14-year-old had been planning to meet with school friends at Cavehill after setting out on his bike on Sunday June 21, 2020.
He was captured on CCTV cycling through the city centre and then towards the north of the city. In the final clip, the last footage of Noah before he disappeared, he is seen riding the bike naked.
His naked body was found in an underground water tunnel on June 27, six days after he left home.
A postmortem examination found the likely cause of death was drowning.
On Monday, the court heard a statement from Dr Louise Bowers, forensic psychologist, dated October 2021.
Among the items Noah had in his possession when he left home in June 2020 was the self-help book 12 Rules for Life, by the author Jordan Peterson.
Dr Bowers said Noah was âtotally obsessedâ with the 12 Rules for Life book which clearly had a âprofound impact on Noah and almost certainly influenced some of the changesâ seen in the days of June 2020, but alone is not enough to explain âtroubling behaviourâ before his death.
She said Noah was âadored by his motherâ and the pair had a âstrong attachment to each otherâ.
He also âdid not have a history of mental health difficultiesâ and no evidence he was experiencing any mental disorders, with âno history of self-harming behaviour or suicidal ideationâ.
Dr Bowers said it is possible Noah had some âtraits of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)â but concluded he was a âquirky young man with some obsessional traitsâ that would not have met the threshold for diagnosis.
She described Noah as a âreasonably well-adjusted 14-year-oldâ but his mother had reported in the days before his death he had become âweepy, his mood was low, had become more affectionate physically and verbally towards herâ.
He had become âextremely introspectiveâ and ârejected offersâ from his friends to talk, being âawake in the middle of the night and searching for things that at times had dark themesâ.
While Dr Bowers found no events in Noahâs life that may have triggered depression, the illness can develop âwithout warning in children who were previously well-adjustedâ.
She said it is âpossible Noah was experiencing some symptoms of depression in the run-up to his disappearanceâ.
The psychologist also ruled that Noah was âshowing signs of psychological disturbance before he left his houseâ which became âmuch more concerningâ on departure, and then showed âincreasingly disturbed behaviour as he cycled through the city of Belfastâ.
He went on to discard his rucksack and laptop, before the rest of his clothing, in what Dr Bowers described as a âsequence of unusual and perplexing behaviourâ.
She ruled that a postmortem examination of Noahâs body made it unlikely to be caused by taking drugs or alcohol or a head injury.




