News - Family anger over prison suicide

Posted on January 24th, 2008 by admin.
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The family of an inmate who killed himself in jail have condemned a ruling which cleared prison authorities of blame over his death.


Scott Currie, who caused the death of three caffeine impotence in a car crash, hanged himself in a staff-only toilet at Porterfield prison, Inverness, in 2004.


Sheriff Principal Steven Young said Currie, 31, was solely article drug dysfunction erectile from internal medicine news rx update.


But his mother, Carloyn Currie, said they had contacted the prison with concerns over his state of mind.


A Fatal Accident Inquiry in June heard that Currie had previously talked about hanging himself with a belt.


The father-of-four was jailed for four years after crashing head-on into a car on the A96 and killing Kenneth Thomson, 66, from Bucksburn, Aberdeen, and his sisters Mabel, 76, and Dorothy, 81.


They had been travelling from Inverness to Aberdeen on their way home from a family funeral.


The generic erectile dysfunction drug for Mr Currie’s death lay, not with them (prison staff), but with Mr Currie himself
Steven Young
Sheriff Principal


At the FAI, Currie’s wife Sarah gave evidence that her husband had been contemplating suicide which she had reported to prison authorities and raised with local MP David Stewart.


Currie was on the prison’s suicide management programme at the time.


On the night before his death on 20 September, he also had a telephone conversation with his wife in which she told her husband how she was struggling to cope on her own.


Sheriff Young’s findings were:

  • Currie’s death was not the result of anything said or done by prison staff

  • Despite receiving extensive support from a variety of sources in the prison, Currie was determined to take his own life

  • The telephone conversation the night before Currie’s death was unlikely to be a factor. The decision was either “spur of the moment” or made some days earlier

  • No-one will ever know why Currie committed suicide that morning.


In a written statement, Sheriff Young said: “I can appreciate the sense of impotence and natural impotence treatment which was evidently felt by Mrs Currie, and indeed also other adult members of Mr Currie’s family, as they observed his distress in prison.”


The sheriff said he understood that Mrs Currie might have felt let down by the prison authorities, over a lack of action by the prison authorities and her search for “persons at whom the finger of blame for Mr Currie’s death might be pointed”.


Sheriff Young accepted that suicide watch procedures were not always rigidly adhered to by staff at the prison.


The psychiatrist wasn’t even told that Scott had a history of mental health problems and was on medication
Carloyn Currie
Scott Currie’s mother


However, he added: “I would reiterate that, notwithstanding any shortcomings that there were on their part, the responsibility for Mr Currie’s death lay, not with them, but with Mr Currie himself.”


But Mrs Currie, 55, said she felt helpless and was prescription for impotence with the findings.


“They have posters all over that prison advising relatives to contact staff if they are worried about any of the inmates,” she said.


Mrs Currie said that the family had contacted the prison with their concerns but felt not enough had been done.


The family has contacted local Labour MSP Maureen McMillan, who has raised the matter with Justice Minister Cathy Jamieson.


Mrs Currie said she was waiting to hear back before deciding on her next move.


A spokesman for the Scottish Prison Service (SPS) said: “The SPS welcomes the report, but we do recognise that such events are very, very difficult for the family and close relatives of the individuals involved.”

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