Portsmouth News

Retired brigadier broke neck in fall, inquest told

PTSD sufferer ‘used drink as crutch’

- by Tom Cotterill The News tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

A RETIRED brigadier who drank four bottles of wine as a ‘crutch’ to cope with posttrauma­tic stress disorder (PTSD) while living alone during lockdown, fell down the stairs at his home and broke his neck, an inquest has heard.

Mark Noble, 62, who served in the Royal Marines for 31 years, had an alcohol level of 4.7 times the drink drive limit when he fell at his home in Old Portsmouth, on July 22 last year.

Mr Noble, who had served as a helicopter pilot in the first Gulf war and had gone on to become the commanding officer of RNAS Yeovilton, and also the chief executive of the Royal Marines Charitable

Trust Fund, died of spinal injuries and respirator­y depression suffered during the fall caused by alcohol toxicity.

His son, Tom Noble, told the Portsmouth inquest his father had developed PTSD and adjustment disorder from his service, but also from losing two friends in high-risk training flights.

The inquest heard that Mr Noble’s first wife, Jan, died in 2007 and he went on to have a ‘toxic’ relationsh­ip with his second wife, Sandy, which ‘added stresses’ to his life.

In 2015, Mr Noble was given a suspended prison sentence after pleading guilty to a charge of assault against his wife.

Tom Noble, who found his father dead at the foot of the stairs, said his father’s drinking had worsened during lockdown, when he was drinking heavily on a daily basis.

He said: ‘That was a pattern that developed during the course of the first lockdown, that reflects directly a man who was living on his own and had nothing to do’.

Recording a verdict of accidental death, coroner Jason Pegg said: ‘Mark Noble had served both his country and corps well, he had a 31-year career in the Royal Marines, retiring as a brigadier in 2011.

‘He was a very well respected and regarded officer within the corps. Mark Noble suffered some consequenc­es of his military service, he was diagnosed with PTSD and adjustment disorder’.

Describing his father, Mr Noble said: ‘I couldn’t speak more highly of him, he was a man revered and respected tremendous­ly, loved dearly, a wonderful sense of humour, compassion­ate, honest.

‘He was a beloved grandfathe­r as well, I would describe him as very traditiona­l, Victorian in his approach, that belied a very compassion­ate, humorous, sharp wit that we enjoyed very much.’

 ??  ?? INQUEST Mark Noble
INQUEST Mark Noble

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