The New Zealand teacher found crushed last year at a waste
transfer station in East Sussex had earlier tried to get his
ejected flatmate allowed back into the pub where they were
drinking, a British coroner's inquest has been told.
New Zealander Scott Williams (35) later unsuccessfully tried
to share a taxi with two women he met at the Brighton pub,
the inquest was told.
Mr Williams apparently ended up crawling into a wheelie bin,
and was found dead among rubbish at a waste transfer site,
the Press Association in Britain reported.
A former maths teacher at Auckland's Pakuranga College, he
was working in London, and travelled to Brighton on July 11
with a flatmate, Robert Pinniger, and planned to stay at Mr
Pinniger's mother's house.
The two men went to the Black Lion pub for a night out. Mr
Pinniger was asked to leave the pub about 1am but Mr Williams
did not leave until the bar closed at 2.30am.
He was later emptied from a rubbish truck which had collected
waste from across Brighton about 6.25am, and the results of
his post-mortem showed he had died from crush injuries to his
chest.
CCTV images of his last known movements showed him walk a
female companion to a taxi rank on Brighton seafront in the
early hours of July 12. He was never seen alive again.
Mr Pinniger told jurors they drank lager at the Black Lion
pub with a number of Sambuca shots, but Mr Williams did not
appear particularly intoxicated, he said.
Mr Williams was a keen sportsman and was 190.5cm tall and
well-built.
Mr Pinniger said he was eventually asked to leave by door
staff after he fell asleep inside the pub. He got a taxi back
to his mother's house and he expected Mr Williams to follow
later.
Pub doorman Robin Morris said in a statement read at the
inquest that he had noticed Mr Williams inside the Black Lion
as he was "quite muscular and physically imposing".
But the New Zealander took his time over his drinks and was
"not stumbling and falling around".
After he and his colleagues asked Mr Pinniger to leave, Mr
Williams tried to persuade him to let him back in, but "he
was too sensible to argue with me".
Metro newspaper reported Charlotte Radford told the inquest
that she and her sister had met Mr Williams in the pub that
night.
"He walked us to the taxi rank and asked to share the taxi
with us but we only just had enough to get us home," she
added.
At last year's opening of the inquest into his death,
toxicology results showed that Mr Williams was almost three
times over the British drink-drive limit -- with 220mg of
alcohol per 100ml of blood.
The inquest is continuing.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.