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Lee Webster guilty of pills in beer 'prank' killing | Lee Webster guilty of pills in beer 'prank' killing |
(35 minutes later) | |
A man has been found guilty of killing his friend by putting 27 anti-depressant tablets into his drink. | A man has been found guilty of killing his friend by putting 27 anti-depressant tablets into his drink. |
Lee Webster, 30, of Dover Road East, Gravesend, Kent, was convicted of the manslaughter of Jason Wood at Maidstone Crown Court. | Lee Webster, 30, of Dover Road East, Gravesend, Kent, was convicted of the manslaughter of Jason Wood at Maidstone Crown Court. |
He had denied the charge claiming he slipped the Mirtazapine pills into Mr Wood's beer as a practical joke. | He had denied the charge claiming he slipped the Mirtazapine pills into Mr Wood's beer as a practical joke. |
The court was told Mr Wood, also aged 30 and who had dwarfism, died hours after the prank on 22 October. | The court was told Mr Wood, also aged 30 and who had dwarfism, died hours after the prank on 22 October. |
Post-mortem tests showed he had fluid on his lungs and the pathologist concluded he died from an overdose of Mirtazapine in combination with excess alcohol. | |
'Stupid thing' | |
In the closing speeches Oliver Saxby QC, defending, told the jury: "I want to make this clear, there was nothing in the least bit funny in what Lee Webster did on 22 October. | |
"Yes they were friends, yes it was meant to be a prank but he didn't intend to cause him harm. | |
"They were all under the effect of alcohol. It may have been that Jason drank the beer knowing one of his mates had done it. | |
"On any analysis, it was a stupid thing to have done." | |
The court heard Mr Wood had been diagnosed with moderate obstructive sleep apnoea, which would cause his airway to collapse between 20 to 25 times a night, and Webster's defence team argued other factors might have caused his death. | |
Webster had also an denied an alternative charge of administering a poison or noxious substance. |