Calgary Herald

Nurse duped in hoax found hanging by scarf

- JILL LAWLESS

A nurse was found hanging in her room three days after she had been duped by a hoax call from Australian DJs about the pregnant Duchess of Cambridge, a U.K. inquest was told Thursday.

The case is being treated as an apparent suicide.

Coroner’s officer Lynda Martindill said nurse Jacintha Saldanha was discovered hanging by a scarf from a wardrobe in her nurses’ quarters Friday by a colleague and a member of security staff at London’s King Edward VII Hospital. Martindill said an attempt to revive Saldanha failed.

Police Det. Chief Insp. James Harman said Saldanha, 46, also had injuries to her wrists.

He told the inquest at Westminste­r Coroner’s Court that two notes were found at the scene and another was found among Saldanha’s belongings. He said there were no suspicious circumstan­ces, meaning nobody else was involved in Saldanha’s death.

Harman said police were examining the notes, interviewi­ng the nurse’s friends, family and colleagues and looking at emails and phone calls to establish what led to her death.

He also said detectives would be contacting police in the Australian state of New South Wales to collect “relevant evidence.”

Saldanha answered the phone last week when two Australian disc jockeys called seeking informatio­n about the former Kate Middleton, who was being treated for severe morning sickness. The DJs impersonat­ed Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles, and Saldanha was tricked into transferri­ng the call to another nurse, who revealed private details about the duchess’ condition.

The DJs, Mel Greig and Michael Christian, apologized for the prank in emotional interviews on Australian television, saying they never expected their call would be put through.

The show was taken off the air and the DJs have been suspended.

Australia’s media watchdog, the Australian Communicat­ions and Media Authority, said Thursday it was launching an official investigat­ion into whether radio station 2DayFM breached its broadcasti­ng licence conditions and the industry code of practice. In London, coroner Fiona Wilcox opened and adjourned Saldanha’s inquest until March 26.

Wilcox expressed “my sympathies to her family and everybody who has been touched by this tragic death.”

In Britain, inquests are held to determine the facts whenever someone dies unexpected­ly, violently or in disputed circumstan­ces. Inquests do not determine criminal liability or apportion blame.

The local authority, Westminste­r Council, said Saldanha’s body was released to her family after Thursday’s hearing.

Saldanha, who was born in India, lived in Bristol in southweste­rn England with her husband and two teenage children.

Her husband, Benedict Barboza, has said she will be laid to rest in Shirva, India. The family was not in court. Lawmaker Keith Vaz, who has spoken on their behalf, said the nurse’s loved ones “need time to grieve.”

 ??  ?? Jacintha Saldanha’s body has been released to her family for burial.
Jacintha Saldanha’s body has been released to her family for burial.

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