Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

British rugby players die after taking heroin in Lanka

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Two British rugby players who died after taking drugs in Sri Lanka would not have known what they were taking, an inquest has been told.

Thomas Howard, 25, and Thomas Baty, 26, died while on tour with Durham-based Clems Pirates RFC in May last year.

They were said to have paid a local taxi driver to get them drugs, but were not regular users and would have been unaware it was heroin they were taking, the BBC reported.

The coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death.

Pathologis­ts told the inquest that although they had been given limited evidence from Sri Lanka, it seemed "highly likely" that the cause of death in both cases was "opiate toxicity".

The hearing, at Crook Coroner's Court, was told a Durham Police investigat­ion found significan­t gaps and inconsiste­ncies in the Sri Lankan evidence.

Evidence from the Sri Lankan investigat­ion included a tuk tuk driver who said two foreigners got in and "one of them asked me if I could find them some heroin".

It was claimed they were later supplied with seven packets of heroin by another man before he took them back to the hotel.

The inquest heard they had taken a substance known locally as "brown sugar" -- a cheap version of heroin.

Coroner Crispin Oliver said: "They had no prior knowledge of this substance. They would not have known that it was heroin."

Witnesses gave different accounts regarding the amount the men paid for the drugs, with some saying it was 15,000 Sri Lankan rupees and others saying it was 10,000.

Phil McEhone, from Durham Police, told the hearing a Sri Lankan was named in court as the alleged drug dealer but he was never arrested and "seems to be forgotten about".

The officer said it had been frustratin­g trying to get informatio­n from Sri Lanka and the inconsiste­ncies meant "none of it sits right".

He agreed with the coroner that they were "not two lads who were habitual drug users. They were not in that circle at all".

When asked if it was probable they had not sought heroin and were unaware that was what they were taking, he said: "It is more than likely, from what I have heard from Sri Lanka."

Ruling a verdict of accidental death, Mr Oliver described it as a "genuine tragedy" and a warning to others travelling abroad to be careful about "what they are encouraged to take".

 ??  ?? Thomas Baty (left) and Thomas Howard were discovered in their hotel rooms suffering from respirator­y failure
Thomas Baty (left) and Thomas Howard were discovered in their hotel rooms suffering from respirator­y failure

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