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| Thursday, 23 May, 2002, 14:16 GMT 15:16 UK 'Prison drove my son to suicide'
"My son had been refusing food and water for several months - he'd gone from 11 stone to five-and-a-half. I thought he was being transferred to a psychiatric hospital, yet they put him in a taxi to hospital on his own," says Mrs Shore. "Lester got out, got on a train and went back to Uxbridge [in west London] where he'd grown up. He went to the top of the car park and committed suicide."
In the weeks just prior to his release, Lester was taken to Whittington Hospital suffering with malnutrition and dehydration. He refused treatment. Kept in the dark Yet the Shore family had no idea what was going on. As Lester had refused all contact - his family believes as a cry for help - they knew nothing of his deteriorating state.
"[The prison authorities] told me I had no right to know because he was over 18. It was only after I cried and begged that they put me through to a warder, who told me he was OK." But Lester was far from fine. The day before he was released, a hospital doctor phoned Mrs Shore to tell her that he had ordered a full psychiatric report. It was never carried out. Mrs Shore is angry at the prison for not sectioning her son, which would have meant he received treatment instead of being released.
Although the Prison Service does not comment on individual cases, a spokeswoman said much work was underway to prevent suicides both in and out of prisons. She said the prison and probation services were developing national guidelines on protecting vulnerable offenders, and on sharing information so none fell through the cracks. The Home Office said it was hoping to make significant progress on developing guidelines on protection of vulnerable prisoners by autumn this year. One of many Each year dozens of offenders take the same drastic step as Lester within a week of being released, according to a Howard League for Penal Reform report released on Wednesday. "Thousands of prisoners leave prison every year with nowhere to go and no support," says the report author, Claire McCarthy.
Mrs Shore hopes other offenders will be given the help they need before they lose all hope. "My son was a nice guy; he wasn't just a drug addict. He didn't deserve to die the way he did, feeling that it wasn't worth living anymore. "And somewhere today, someone else's son will come out of prison and kill himself. It doesn't need to be like this." | See also: 22 May 02 | UK 16 Feb 02 | Health 03 Apr 02 | Scotland 11 Oct 01 | Health Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top UK stories now: Links to more UK stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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