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Autistic teenager who killed himself suffered years of intimidation at the hands of college bullies

 

Sarah Cassidy
Tuesday 17 April 2012 18:44 BST
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The mother of an autistic teenager who killed himself in front of a train has told an inquest that he suffered years of intimidation at the hands of college bullies.

Glenys Oates told a coroner of her desperate battle to get mental health intervention for her son Gareth who had already tried to kill himself once and had talked of suicide from the age of 11.

Gareth Oates, from Stowmarket, Suffolk, was 18 when he died after travelling to Marsden station in West Yorkshire on March 2 2010.

His mother told Bradford Coroner's Court how difficult it had been to get social and medical services in Suffolk to accept the seriousness of her son's suicidal condition.

She warned that a gap in care services for autistic teenagers could allow further tragedies to occur.

Mrs Oates told the court Gareth was routinely bullied and was even given the nickname "suicide boy" by some fellow pupils at West Suffolk College.

She said he was also bullied in public and she had later received an apology from Suffolk Police for not dealing with it more robustly.

She said this was "bullying of a disabled person - deliberate targeting".

But Mrs Oates said she believed Gareth tried to take his own life because of a meeting with a GP link-worker the day before which left him "deeply, deeply distressed".

She told the coroner she believed he had taken literally a comment made to him by the link-worker that "he'd be better off dead than in college education".

She said taking language literally was a characteristic of his autism.

Mrs Oates described how she became more and more concerned about her son's suicidal tendencies over the summer of 2009 but could not convince mental health services of the seriousness of his situation.

She said: "There could be no doubt this young man, my son, was suicidal."

Mrs Oates said she eventually secured a course of cognitive behavioural therapy for Gareth but struggled to get further support and she became increasingly desperate.

She said he became obsessed with the 1985 action film The Runaway Train - which ends with one of the main characters killing himself in front of the engine.

Mrs Oates said she believed some of the details of her son's death mirrored that in the film.

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