Daily Mail

Guilty, feckless family who left boy, 18, to ‘rot to death’

- By Chris Brooke

THE mother and grandmothe­r of a teenager they let ‘rot to death’ were convicted of his manslaught­er yesterday.

Jordan Burling, 18, weighed less than 6st and his appearance was likened to a concentrat­ion camp victim as he succumbed to malnutriti­on over a six-month period.

There was no reason for the vulnerable but healthy young man to starve to death apart from sheer neglect by a family said to suffer from mental health disorders. They apparently loved Jordan and the house in Leeds was stocked with food but no one contacted a doctor as he deteriorat­ed. By the time his mother Dawn Cranston, 45, finally called 999 in June 2016 he was confined to a bed on the living room floor, covered in deep bedsores and had even been put in nappies.

A police search also found the remains of Jordan’s baby brother, hidden in a rucksack in a cupboard for 14 years. The case raises serious questions about how the dysfunctio­nal to drop off the family authoritie­s’ were allowed radar. Jordan’s sister Abigail Burling, 25, was cleared of his manslaught­er by jurors but convicted of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable person. She will be sentenced along with mother Dawn and grandmothe­r Denise Cranston, 70, at Leeds Crown Court tomorrow.

Dawn had earlier pleaded guilty to concealing the death of a baby, who she said was stillborn at home. Alarm bells first rang when ‘dirty’ Jordan started primary school aged four without being toilet trained. Numerous appointmen­ts were made by worried social services, but all were ignored by his mother and father Steven Burling. Dawn – now a single mother – decided to homeschool Jordan from the age of 12 when he was bullied in class.

However, with no legal obligation to carry out checks, the education authority lost track of him. The last time Jordan saw a doctor was in 2010. An independen­t review of the different agencies’ involvemen­t, commission­ed by the local authority, is being carried out. Over around six months until his death, Jordan lost weight dramatical­ly without suffering any illness to cause it, living off a daily diet of five supermarke­t milkshakes.

Nicholas Lumley QC, prosecutin­g, said during the trial that Jordan had been ‘left to rot’ and compared his body to what was seen in Second World War concentrat­ion camps. However, police found no evidence of malicious intent.

On June 30, 2016, the day Jordan died, a police officer concluded the whole family had a ‘mental health issue’ due to their lack of emotion and odd comments.

That day Dawn, said by her defence psychiatri­st to have a type of ‘dissociati­ve disorder’, expressed concern about getting a refund on a £7 walking frame she had recently bought for him.

 ??  ?? Neglect: Denise, left, and Dawn Cranston
Neglect: Denise, left, and Dawn Cranston
 ??  ?? Starved: Jordan
Starved: Jordan
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