It first appeared in West Street in Dorking on 30 August, when the road was closed to cars, and has since been investigated by Thames Water.
Sir Chris Bryant, the Minister of State for Data Protection and Telecoms said the government will "do everything we possibly can" to ensure coroners understand their powers and duties outlined in the new bill.He added that he hopes tech companies embrace the change too and understand that they need to "look after" families who have lost loved ones.
Ms Roome said that Jools' social media is the one thing that was not investigated after his death."There was nothing offline when Jools died - there was no bullying, no mental health issues."We didn't look at a vital piece of evidence that could have given us answers."
Later this month, she has a meeting with the Home Office and the Minister of Justice who is in charge of the coronial system to discuss the new bill.In the future, Ms Roome hopes that other grieving families will not be left in her situation.
"I'm three years down the line with my 14-year-old child who's no longer here, with no answers to understand why on earth he did what he did and that's very frustrating.
"I know of other parents going through the same situation right now and I look at them and think 'you are going to end up like me unless we change the system.'We can also reveal more from Mr Murray's other deleted LinkedIn posts, made on the day of the Southport attack.
This one repeats the Al-Shakati name:"BBC news are lying. The Child murderer was from Africa. He was on MI6 watch. His name is Ali Al Shakati."
"I see people stil [sic] believe what the left wing media say because it suits their own left wing woke agenda. It's because of these sort of people the reason why this has happened in the first place."Mr Murray appeared to have become a credible source on social media for many. One woman on Facebook posted in support of him, asking others "You believe media/news over the people who was the witness…[?]"