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Another young suicide highlights gaps in Cornwall’s mental health services

NOTE: I have used Brandon’s name and gender reference terms/pronouns as used by the speakers and based on the family’s expressed preference.

The death of a transgender person has again highlighted gaps in the provision of mental health care in Cornwall, an inquest has revealed. Brandon Turner, who was just 21 and known as Amelia, was found dead in a wooded area outside Launceston on June 21 last year, a month after being released from a mental health hospital.




An inquest into his death heard how Brandon and his brother Aidan were adopted by Pete and Gillian Turner when they were three and five years old respectively. They were removed from their birth parents’ care due to neglect and emotional abuse.

At an inquest in Truro on Thursday (May 9), Brandon’s mother Gillian (who asked to be named Brandon during the inquest) said Brandon was a bright and curious boy but had low self-esteem and had tried to settle down. school, which she attributed to childhood trauma. She told the hearing that as Brandon grew up, his behavior became challenging.

Read more: Son’s killing of mother could have been avoided if her mental health had been reassessed, inquest finds

Read more: ‘Excellent mum’ from Cornwall dies of ‘smoker’s disease’ caused by vegetables

She said she never mentioned her gender identity to her husband. Brandon left the family home at 19 and moved around Cornwall and Devon, sleeping in a tent in the Exmouth area and couch surfing at friends’ houses. Mrs Turner said Brandon would use cannabis as a way of coping with his mental health problems and also told her husband he had suicidal thoughts for which he was encouraged to seek help.

His mother told the hearing: “We tried to help him but he never talked about his struggles. He told us he was taking medication. He never talked about suicide with me, but Pete encouraged him to seek help.

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