Bangkok Post

Inmate’s gasps ‘seen as ruse’: inquest

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SYDNEY: A mentally ill indigenous prisoner in Australia who died after being restrained appeared to be pretending to struggle for breath as a “diversiona­ry tactic” to avoid moving cells, a guard who helped hold him down told an inquest yesterday.

Indigenous people are just 700,000 of Australia’s population of 24 million, but form a disproport­ionate number of prisoners and rank near the bottom on economic and social indicators.

In the Northern Territory, every child in detention is indigenous.

The guard, one of five who held down David Dungay Jr, 26, in his cell in 2015, said that despite having no medical training, he believed the prisoner’s gasps amounted to hyperventi­lating and that he could keep the man conscious by making him speak.

“My father always said to me, ‘Talk to me, if you’re talking, you can breathe,’” the guard, identified only as Officer A, told the Sydney court holding the inquest into Dungay’s death, referring to his own history of panic attacks.

The man’s name was withheld after the coroner ruled that the guards involved in the incident could testify without being identified. The guard had no training before the incident about asphyxiati­on risks when forcibly restrainin­g prisoners, he said.

Dungay’s death has received only modest attention in Australia, but it highlights concerns about the treatment of indigenous people in custody.

Supporters of Dungay’s family and indigenous rights campaigner­s have circulated a graphic eight-minute video in which prison guards pin him down and drag him between cells before realising he has died.

The video, made by prison staff, is also the main evidence at the inquest, where the coroner will rule on a formal cause of death and recommend further action, such as changes to regulation­s or criminal charges.

The guard testified that he was called to Dungay’s cell in the jail’s psychiatri­c unit after the confrontat­ion with guards had begun.

He was told Dungay was resisting being moved to a cell with camera surveillan­ce, he added.

The guard, who still works at the prison, said he had since received training about managing inmates at risk of asphyxiati­on.

“Having the tools that I have now, it would have let me make a better informed decision,” he added.

When the video was played, many of Dungay’s supporters left the courtroom, but his mother stayed behind.

“It’s agonising, but I’ll take the pain to the end,” Leetona Dungay told Reuters outside the courthouse. The inquest resumes today.

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