This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-birmingham-23167031
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Wolverhampton heroin death toddler's parents jailed | Wolverhampton heroin death toddler's parents jailed |
(35 minutes later) | |
The parents of a toddler who died from a heroin overdose have been jailed. | The parents of a toddler who died from a heroin overdose have been jailed. |
Daniel Jones, aged 23 months, collapsed at a house in Penn in Wolverhampton in May 2012. He died later in hospital. | Daniel Jones, aged 23 months, collapsed at a house in Penn in Wolverhampton in May 2012. He died later in hospital. |
Simon Jones, 30, from Windsor Avenue, Penn, admitted manslaughter, while Emma Bradburn, 34, of the same address, admitted causing or allowing the death. | Simon Jones, 30, from Windsor Avenue, Penn, admitted manslaughter, while Emma Bradburn, 34, of the same address, admitted causing or allowing the death. |
Jones was jailed for six years and Bradburn for four at Wolverhampton Crown Court. | Jones was jailed for six years and Bradburn for four at Wolverhampton Crown Court. |
Sentencing the couple, Mrs Justice Thirlwall said there was no doubt the two, who were both long-term heroin addicts, had loved their boy. | |
"It is one thing to risk your own health but quite another matter entirely to risk your son's," she told them. | |
'Gross betrayal of trust' | |
The court heard that Jones fully accepted he was responsible for his son ingesting a tiny, but lethal, amount of heroin, as he had been using the drug around the time Daniel died. | |
Following his arrest, shortly after the toddler's death, Jones tested positive for the drug while Bradburn did not, the court heard. | |
Examination of a sample of Daniel's hair revealed the presence not only of heroin, but also amphetamines, cocaine and cannabis. | |
Both Jones and Bradburn told the court they never smoked heroin or cannabis in front of their son. | |
The court heard that Daniel slept in his parents' bed, where police found tin foil stained with a brown residue, empty clingfilm packets and other paraphernalia associated with the transport and use of heroin in the room's bedside tables. | |
Det Insp John Smith, from West Midlands Police, said Daniel's death was "a gross betrayal of trust" by his parents. | Det Insp John Smith, from West Midlands Police, said Daniel's death was "a gross betrayal of trust" by his parents. |
"This was a truly tragic case, where a young boy has had his life so needlessly cut short, having been exposed to illegal and dangerous substances," he added. | "This was a truly tragic case, where a young boy has had his life so needlessly cut short, having been exposed to illegal and dangerous substances," he added. |
Serious case review | |
The death was initially treated as unexplained but tests later determined the toddler had died from a heroin overdose. | The death was initially treated as unexplained but tests later determined the toddler had died from a heroin overdose. |
During the police investigation, a small cannabis-growing operation was found in the loft and drug paraphernalia was found in a bedroom, police said. | During the police investigation, a small cannabis-growing operation was found in the loft and drug paraphernalia was found in a bedroom, police said. |
Mr Smith said: "We don't know exactly how the youngster came to ingest the illegal drug, but we do know that he should never have been exposed to [it] in any case." | Mr Smith said: "We don't know exactly how the youngster came to ingest the illegal drug, but we do know that he should never have been exposed to [it] in any case." |
The court also heard that just two weeks before his death, social services removed Daniel from a child in need plan as they were satisfied with the care he was receiving at home. | |
Alan Coe, chair of the Wolverhampton Safeguarding Children Board, said it had commissioned a serious case review from an independent expert to establish if there were any lessons that would "improve the outcomes for other children in similar circumstances". | |
"In any instance where health, social care or other services knew and were involved in the family where a child dies non-accidentally, we must always find out if there was anything that might have been done to have better protected them," he added. |
Previous version
1
Next version