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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Bronwen Weatherby & Hannah Mackenzie Wood

Ex-soldier who died after being Tasered 'suffered police harassment'

The distraught father of a former soldier who died after being Tasered by police told an inquest his son “suffered a campaign of harassment” by officers in the years before his death.

Platoon Sergeant Spencer Beynon died after police received calls expressing concern over his behaviour, according to Wales Online.

The 43-year-old, from Llanelli, had been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) after his tours in Afghanistan and Iraq serving with the Royal Welsh.

He was discharged from service on medical grounds, a jury heard on Wednesday.

On July 14, 2016, police responded to a report by a neighbour of a man heading down a road holding a cannabis pipe and barefoot, with officers finding Mr Beynon on a nearby street with an injury to his neck soon after.

Spencer's mum and dad Margaret and Chris Beynon at their son's grave. (Rowan Griffiths)

He later collapsed after being hit with a Taser, with officers claiming they had deployed the weapon after he had shown “aggression” towards them.

Christopher Beynon, his father, said that in the 18 months prior to his death, officers had repeatedly searched his son’s home, with severe damage being done to the windows and doors of the property during one of the busts.

Mr Beynon said he believed his son’s mental health was improving, noting he had become interested in Buddhism and was “more placid”.

But on the day he died, Mr Beynon said he arrived home at around 9.30am to find his son behaving “absolutely nuts”.

“He was shouting at the top of his voice, ‘I love you, I love you, I’m going to make you proud’,” he said. He got down into a prayer then got up and tried to exorcise the devil from me.

“His mood changed, and a blackness came over him.”

Spencer Beynon (left) with army comrade Ryan Francis, who was killed in action in Iraq. (Wales Online)

After his son left, Mr Beynon said he called 999 while his wife went out to look for him.

A transcript of the call read out in the hearing showed Mr Beynon asked for his son to be sectioned, describing his behaviour as “insane”.

He did not hear of his son until around 7.30pm when he was contacted by his granddaughter who told him he had died.

At the scene, he said he was told by a police sergeant that his son’s body had already been taken by the ambulance, but that he now believes it remained under a sheet in the road.

It was the beginning of what he claims was a “catalogue of lies” he was told by the police force following his son’s death.

A welfare check was not carried out after Mr Beynon’s call to police in the morning and acting senior coroner Paul Bennett has asked the jury to decide whether the police’s response was appropriate.

Spencer Beynon (Graham Harries)

The jury will also have to decide whether police’s response to events that unfolded in Maes y Bwlch, where Mr Beynon eventually died, was reasonable, whether it was reasonable for officers to use a Taser, and whether the Taser contributed to his death.

They will also decide if the medical assistance given at the scene was appropriate.

Describing his son’s battle with mental illness following his return to Wales from the war zones, Mr Beynon said: “Anyone who has lived with PTSD knows it’s a horror show. It was for him, and for me, his mother and sister.

“He was screaming, crying, punching the walls, and locking himself in his room for days on end.

“PTSD, it’s the worst thing you could see your child go through.”

Police in Maes y Bwlch, Llanelli, on June 15, 2016. (Benjamin Wright)

He said his son did not sleep well and thought about suicide, adding: “We used to talk. I’m an ex-soldier too. I’d say think about your kids and he’d say you’ll look after my kids. I said well, think of your mummy boy.”

“I always pulled him back.”

A statement taken from Mr Beynon’s girlfriend at the time, Victoria Key – who has since died, was read out at the hearing.

In it she said how Mr Beynon had begun acting strangely a couple of days before he died, increasingly saying he saw the “devil” in people, including their dog.

The evening of his death, Ms Key said they were in the house together. He had told her “how much he loved me, and wanted to get married on the beach”.

But that after she sat on him and gave him a kiss “he looked at me and his eyes were black for a moment”.

She said he had pushed her off him and left the house without any shoes, smashing the glass in a door frame as he went.

The four-week jury inquest into Mr Beynon’s death is taking place at Parc y Scarlets rugby union stadium in Llanelli.

For confidential support the Samaritans can be contacted for free around the clock 365 days a year on 116 123.

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