Pubdate: Sat, 19 Apr 2008 Source: Western Mail (UK) Copyright: 2008 Media Wales Ltd Contact: http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2598 Author: Robin Turner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?132 (Heroin Overdose) SADNESS OVER HEROIN GIRL'S NEEDLESS DEATH The sister and mother of a 16-year-old girl, who both watched TV instead of calling an ambulance as the teenager died of a heroin overdose, are now both facing jail. While Carly Townsend was dying in a bedroom at their family home in Pwll, Llanelli, last May, her 46-year-old mother Andrea Townsend and 26-year-old sister Gemma Evans watched Emmerdale downstairs. Even though Carly's lips turned blue before she died, Townsend's only defence was to say: "I had seen her 10 times worse on drugs... I thought she would sleep it off." On Thursday, a jury at Swansea Crown Court found mother-of-four Townsend guilty of manslaughter due to gross neglect. And yesterday, after deliberating for more than 10 hours, they convicted Evans of the same charge. Paul Thomas, prosecuting, said Evans was a "go-between" in obtaining heroin for Carly from a local dealer. Both mother and daughter were granted bail until a sentencing hearing next month but trial judge Mr Justice Lloyd-Jones warned them jail was "a real possibility". The lead officer in the case, Detective Sergeant Sharon Griffiths, made it clear yesterday Carly had little chance to escape the grip of hard drugs. She said the 16-year-old's mother, a former amphetamine addict, and her sister, who nearly died two years ago from a heroin overdose, provided a platform "for encouragement and support" for Carly to take drugs. Astonishingly, the jury heard that by the time she was 15 Carly, had a ?50-a-day heroin habit. And her mother Andrea Townsend stunned the court by revealing that 20 of her own friends had died from heroin overdoses. Also, her late husband Stephen Townsend, Carly's father, died some years ago after a drugs overdose. Alan Andrews, director of Choose Life Cymru, a Llanelli-based drugs charity, said the town had a problem with heroin. But he added: "It's not just Llanelli - it's the same wherever you go in Wales. "No valley, no small town, no village is immune." He added of the lifestyle of Townsend and Evans: "If you have not lived in that world it's very hard to understand it. "It's another world altogether." Carly was placed under a council care order when she was just seven and was fostered. But at 15 she got a flat in Llanelli's Station Road where there have been numerous drugs raids in recent years. On two occasions she was hospitalised after taking drugs. On one occasion, her mother arrived at the hospital and "discharged" her without consulting any doctors. Carly was sentenced to six months in the Hillside Secure Unit for young offenders at the start of 2007 due to drugs-related offences. After a multi-agency conference it was decided to release her with an electronic tag into the care of her mother. Carly told social workers she was determined to give up drugs. She wanted to become a youth worker because she had been through "such a lot" herself. But a day after her release she broke her electronic tag curfew after taking heroin. A week-and-a-half later she was dead. On May 2 last year, her mother was mowing the lawn at their home in Bassett Terrace, Pwll, when Carly excitedly boasted she had three "?10 bags" (tiny foil wraps of heroin) for a cut price ?20. She injected the drug and after being seen by a Carmarthenshire County Council drugs worker who noted she was "sleepy," she later collapsed. Evans and Townsend picked her up and placed her on the bed and "listened" to her from downstairs where they watched soaps. Because Carly had not taken drugs in her three months at Hillside, her tolerance to the drug was hugely reduced meaning she was extremely vulnerable to an overdose. She told her mother she had a "hot head", a known sign of heroin poisoning. The court heard Townsend would have been well aware of the symptom because her co-defendant daughter had the same symptom when she overdosed on the drug in 2005. Then, Evans was saved by the heroin antidote Naloxone administered by paramedics. But there was no Naloxone for Carly. Evans and Townsend slept in a single bed next to the bed Carly was lying on. When they awoke, they found the teenager dead, curled up in a foetal position. Det Sgt Griffiths, of Dyfed- Powys Police, said yesterday: "There is no pleasure in this verdict today, there is only sadness, sadness for Carly Townsend. "Just 16 years of age...gone...dead. "A needless death as a result of the abuse of heroin." She said drugs still caused tragedies in many families who did all they could to prevent their loved ones taking drugs. But she said this case was different. She said: "Her mother and sister provided a platform of encouragement and support for her to take drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin