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** A man who died of an overdose after appearing on The Jeremy Kyle Show felt he was 'thrown under a bus' on the programme, an inquest has heard.
Reports from Winchester.
? Sky 501 and YouTube.
Mr.
Woolley said his father had continued to be 'very upset' in the following days and would call him up to six times a day.
He said: 'He told me he was getting support and after-care from the show’s counsellors, I explained to him he needed to get in contact with them and keep ringing them to get the after-care that he needed.
He told me he had rang and I said he needed to get some help – ‘Ring the show, ring the show’.
'The inquest heard extracts from a note that Mr.
Dymond left for his son, who told the hearing that he had not been in recent contact with his father before the phone call on the day of the filming.
Ms.
Spearing said: 'In the bottom paragraph he says sorry to you, he asks you not to be mad with him and he knows that you will be but he doesn’t know what to say to you.
He says: ‘I never ever cheated on Jane and that is what is tearing me to pieces and everyone thinks I am but I’m not a cheat.
But I did tell her lies and I lied so much to Jane and that is why she didn’t believe me’.
'The inquest heard a 'pen portrait' of Mr.
Dymond written by his brother, Leslie Dymond, in which he described him as a 'brave' man.
In the pen portrait, read aloud by counsel at the coroner’s court, Leslie told of how his brother joined the RNLI when he was young.
Leslie described how his brother did 'many gruelling tasks' for the institution to rescue people when they got into trouble at sea.
Leslie said there were times when his brother would be delayed returning to shore from a rescue because the sea was too rough.
Coroner Jason Pegg told the hearing that the purpose of the inquest was not to 'apportion civil or criminal liability' to any person involved.