Mohammed Shabir, 45, was taken ill at HMP Leeds, where he was being held on remand, due to stand trial in connection with the deaths of Bryonie Gawith, 29, and her three children last August
A man accused of murdering a mum and her three kids in a house fire died of a heart attack after collapsing in prison minutes after a visit from his family, an inquest has heard.
Mohammed Shabir became unwell at HMP Leeds where he was being held on remand.
He was one of three men due to go on trial later this year accused of murdering Bryonie Gawith, 29; Denisty Birtle, nine; Oscar Birtle, five; and 22-month-old Aubree Birtle.
The family died after a blaze at their home in Bradford, West Yorks, in the early hours of August 21 last year.
An inquest into Shabir’s death heard he became unwell on September 24 and was taken to Leeds General Infirmary by ambulance.
Wakefield Coroner’s Court heard that on the day of his death, Shabir was visited by family members, who said he was his “usual self” but noted that he had become overweight during his time in prison.
CCTV footage after the visit shows Shabir breathless and apparently struggling to walk up stairs, coroner Oliver Longstaff said. He collapsed on his wing at 4.45pm and an ambulance was called three minutes later.
Shabir was taken to hospital, where his condition deteriorated and he went into cardiac arrest before going in for surgery. He was pronounced dead just before 9.30pm, the inquest heard.
The inquest heard Shabir’s family were concerned that there “may be some elements of neglect” and asked why there was an hour and a half between him collapsing and arriving at hospital.
The coroner’s report said the prison service were told there could be a two-hour wait when they called for an ambulance at 4.48pm. The inquest heard an ambulance arrived at 5.17pm and Shabir was managed by paramedics within the prison until then.
The coroner said Shabir had asthma and his family had concerns over whether he was receiving the correct treatment in prison. Reading from a report by coroner’s officer Emma Walker, Mr Longstaff said: “They believe had he not been in prison he would still be alive.”
The report said a review of Mr Shabir’s medical records in prison showed there were no noted exacerbations of his asthma in custody, he had regular asthma reviews and medication was prescribed to him regularly. The coroner recorded a conclusion that Mr Shabir died from natural causes.
Mr Longstaff said: “At the time of his death Mr Shabir had not been convicted of any criminal offence, he had been charged with an offence, he had indicated a plea of not guilty to that offence. There was a trial date set … Mr Shabir died before that trial had taken place.”
Sharaz Ali, 40, who was seriously injured in the fire, and Calum Sunderland, 26, of Calton Street, Keighley, are still due to go on trial next month at Bradford Crown Court.
They deny murdering Ms Gawith and the three children, and attempting to murder and attempting to cause grievous bodily harm to Ms Gawith’s sister Antonia Gawith.
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