Brilliant Final year Neuroscience Student, Lara Nosiru, died under drug influence —Coroner
The Clifton Suspension Bridge from which Miss Nosiru plunged to her death. Mail photos
The friend of a top university student who jumped to her
death from the Clifton Suspension Bridge discussed ways to kill themselves, an
inquest heard on Friday.
“Extremely
bright” Lara Nosiru, 23, had taken a large number of sleeping tablets and some
LSD when she jumped off Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol, the coroner has
concluded.
She was a final year student of neuroscience at the
Bristol University when the incident happened, reports say.
She went there with fellow Bristol
University student, Kasumi Kishi, who told police she had hoped to convince her
not to kill herself. Two days later, Ms Kishi told friends over a pizza
how she and Ms Nosiru had discussed suicide methods and killing themselves
together.
Prosecutors examined the case to
see if charges of assisting in suicide or manslaughter for gross negligence
could be brought against Ms Kishi, but decided there was no case to answer.
Fellow flatmate, Alex Gough, claimed Ms Kishi told the
group that if someone wanted to die, it was cruel to make them stay alive.
Flatmate,
Solene Rebibo, said at the meal Ms Kishi ‘seemed comfortable’ talking about
suicide to Ms Nosiru’s friends.
CCTV
footage showed the two women walking across the famous bridge shortly before
4pm on January 30, with Ms Nosiru occasionally stopping and looking over the
edge
When they reached the
North Somerset side, Ms Nosiru twice tried to climb on to the wall above the
gorge edge, but Ms Kishi pulled her back down.
The two women then appeared to have a minor disagreement
before Ms Kishi walked away and left her without looking back.
The
security cameras showed Ms Nosiru having a final cigarette before climbing on
to the wall and falling to her death.
A coroner
heard that Ms Kishi, who no longer lives in the UK, was interviewed by police
about ‘possible criminal offences being committed’.
Ms Kishi told police that Ms Nosiru had told her to leave
and that she then made her promise not to jump.
She said
she tried to lighten her mood by making a joke about a man who had tried to
jump to his death but had fallen into pig faeces and survived.
Detective
Sergeant, Nick Lawson, told the coroner that Ms Nosiru allegedly told Ms Kishi
“You’ll have to let me go.”
A coroner ruled that Ms Kishi had no direct involvement in
her friend’s death and said the final year neuroscience student took her life
while under the influence of drugs.
Avon and
Somerset Coroner, Dr. Peter Harrowing, heard how Ms Nosiru was ‘acting strange’
on the day she died after taking LSD she had bought at a discount on her
birthday.
She
thought her hands were melting and was restless, saying every time she sat down
she just wanted to get up again, her flatmates said in statements.
She was
hallucinating and seen trying to ‘stamp’ on people who she thought were on her
bedroom floor.
Ms Kishi
went to see her and they spent about 45 minutes together in her bedroom before
going to the bridge in a taxi at around 3.30pm.
The
inquest heard that Ms Nosiru had suffered from depression for four years and
took an overdose the night before her death.
Psychotherapist,
Dr. Niklas Serning, said he had seen Ms Nosiru every week for a year and she
was ‘extremely bright’ and would discuss the meaning of life at their hourly
sessions.
He told
the coroner: “She reported to me she had tried to kill herself. New Year and
Christmas was a very sensitive time for her.”
He said Ms
Nosiru, of South Ockenden, Essex, wanted to give life ‘another try’ and asked
him to ‘make my life meaningful again.’
He said he
last saw Ms Nosiru on the morning of her death when she said she was very tired
but didn’t appear to be under the influence of drugs. She booked a session
for the following week and joked with him about his age.
Asked if
there was anything that would have made him think she was going to take her own
life, he said: “Absolutely not.”
Dr.
Harrowing said Ms. Kishi was not directly involved in Ms Nosiru’s death and she
(Ms Nosiru) had taken a ‘deliberate action’ to jump off the bridge. But he
said he couldn’t be sure beyond reasonable doubt that she had the mental intention
to take her life that day.
He
concluded: “She took her own life whilst under the influence of drugs.”
(Mail Online)
(Mail Online)
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