Glasgow Times

Probe told of rat link to care boy’s fatal brain bleed

- By TOM TORRANCE

A YOUNG boy at an orphanage in the 1960s did not die as a result of an attack by a nun, an inquiry has been told.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry heard that Samuel Carr died of a brain haemorrhag­e at the age of six following an E.coli infection, which he could have caught by touching a dead rat.

The probe heard that the boy, known as Sammy, had been suffering some form of malnourish­ment which would have made him more vulnerable to infections.

Forensic pathologis­t Professor Anthony Busuttil said in a report: “I have no doubt at all that the brain haemorrhag­e ... was not traumatic in origin.”

The inquiry has been hearing evidence over several days about institutio­ns run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, particular­ly Smyllum Park orphanage in Lanark.

It has previously heard claims that Sammy died days after being beaten by a nun at the institutio­n, which closed in 1981.

Professor Busuttil, a regius professor of forensic medicine at the University of Edinburgh, pre- pared a report for the inquiry after studying other post-mortem findings about Sammy, who died in hospital in June 1964.

Reading from his conclusion­s, he told the inquiry: “Based on the complete medical evidence it appears that trauma following on an allegation of assault did not have a direct or indirect part to play in the death of this child.”

He said post-mortem findings showed the boy’s brain was swollen, caused by bleeding over several days, and he agreed with past findings that the cause of death was a cerebral haemorrhag­e.

The expert witness also told how previously inexplicab­le abnormalit­ies in the boy’s kidneys could now be explained by the presence of E.coli infection.

Kidney failure can cause the brain to develop haemorrhag­es, the inquiry heard.

The hearing was told that Sammy died after suffering convulsion­s and a loss of consciousn­ess.

Professor Busuttil said: “(There is) evidence to suggest that he may have been involved in touching or poking a dead rat some time before he took ill. This could have been the source of infection with an E.coli organism, which in turn would have resulted in severe kidney failure.”

Such “catastroph­ic” kidney failure would have decreased his general immunity, making him more prone to secondary yeast and fungal infections, the inquiry heard.

Professor Busuttil also told the hearing in Edinburgh that Sammy had a fairly low weight for a child of his age.

“Given his low body weight, it’s a viable possibilit­y that he may have been suffering from some degree of malnourish­ment,” he told the hearing. “This would have predispose­d him non-specifical­ly to infection and also decreased his general resistance to infection, once any infection had become establishe­d in him.”

The inquiry continues.

 ??  ?? Smyllum Park in Lanark
Smyllum Park in Lanark

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