SEVENTY people and a stillborn baby make up the final death toll in the Grenfell Tower fire, police have confirmed.
All those who died in the blaze in west London five months ago have been recovered and identified, the Metropolitan Police believe.
A baby, Logan Gomes, who was stillborn, has been recorded as a victim of the fire.
Commander Stuart Cundy said: “The human cost and terrible reality of what took place at Grenfell Tower affects so many people.
“Our search operation and ongoing investigation is about those people. Tragically, that night, 70 children and adults died and a baby was stillborn.
“My thoughts and those of all my colleagues in the Met Police are with all those who lost their loved ones, those who survived, the local community and all those who live with this tragedy every day.”
In the immediate aftermath of the blaze 400 people were listed as missing.
Police said footage showed 223 people escaping the fire, while others were not at home on the night of June 14.
Mr Cundy said police had undertaken a “meticulous” search, recovery and identification operation.
He said: “Specialist teams working inside Grenfell Tower and the mortuary have pushed the boundaries of what was scientifically possible to identify people.”
Investigators examined 15.5 tonnes of debris on each floor, carrying out full forensic fingertip searches throughout the 24-storey building.
The search operation, described by the Met as “mammoth”, is expected to finish next month. The final inquests are due to be opened and adjourned on November 22.
Police are continuing their criminal investigation into the fire, pledging to “find the answers that so many people so desperately want”.
In September Scotland Yard said its criminal investigation may consider individual as well as corporate manslaughter charges.
The death toll was initially feared to be much higher as the Met handled thousands of calls from people who believed they knew someone who had been trapped in the tower.
One person was reported missing 46 times, while others were reported under different names and even slight differences of spellings of names had to be investigated.
There were also a number of false claims, and eight people have been charged or are under investigation for fraud in connection with the disaster.
A public inquiry, led by retired Court of Appeal judge Sir Martin Moore-Bick, is looking at events on the night of the fire, how and why the block came to be wrapped in flammable cladding and insulation, and the response of Kensington and Chelsea Council and central Government after the fire.
Procedural hearings in the inquiry will take place on December 11 and 12.
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