Jeremy Kyle Show guest told researcher 'I wish I was dead'
- Published
A man who was found dead after taking a lie-detector test on the Jeremy Kyle Show had told a researcher "I wish I was dead", an inquest has heard.
Steven Dymond, 63, was discovered at his home in Portsmouth on 9 May about a week after recording the ITV programme.
Police have previously told the coroner the death was a suspected suicide.
A lawyer representing Mr Dymond's family told a pre-inquest review he had stopped taking anti-depressants in order to take the show's polygraph.
The court was told Mr Dymond was asked questions on the show, which has never been broadcast, about his relationship with on-off fiancee Jane Callaghan.
Barrister Caoilfhionn Gallagher said the construction worker was "exceptionally vulnerable" when he took part in the recording on 2 May.
"After his cruel shaming he did not get the appropriate support from the aftercare team," she told the court.
Ms Gallagher said there was a "very short" 72-hour period between it being suggested Mr Dymond appeared on the show and the actual filming
She said: "For a decision so potentially life-changing, there is no equivalent. There is no cooling off. You are jumped on very quickly."
Ms Gallagher said that following the recording, Mr Dymond was "put in a homeward-bound taxi within two hours of telling a researcher that he was really upset and that 'life was nothing without Jane' and said 'I wish I was dead', or words to that effect".
There was no evidence that Mr Dymond was given welfare checks by any qualified mental health staff, she added.
"We presume this was left to a medically unqualified researcher," she said.
She added that the family has now requested internal ITV interview notes from Jeremy Kyle, the assistant producer, a researcher and the aftercare and polygraph teams.
Simon Antrobus, representing ITV, told the inquest that Mr Dymond had seen the aftercare team.
He said the unedited recording of the show would be provided, after the court heard earlier that ITV had not let the family see any material from the show.
It was also heard the family have been denied legal aid towards his inquest.
Merry Varney, a solicitor from law firm Leigh Day, which is acting for the family unpaid, said the Legal Aid Agency had wrongly asserted that a parliamentary inquiry into reality TV would look at the death of Mr Dymond.
Mr Dymond's family have appealed against the Legal Aid Agency's decision and are awaiting a response, despite a request for a quick reply, it was heard.
The MP leading the inquiry into reality TV had claimed the Jeremy Kyle Show producers treated guests like criminal suspects. The programme was permanently axed after Mr Dymond's death.
A previous hearing at Portsmouth Coroner's Court was told empty morphine packets were found next to Mr Dymond's body after he had been "growing concerned about the repercussions of the show".
The full inquest is scheduled to begin on 27 April 2020.