An inquest into a man who killed himself a week after appearing on The Jeremy Kyle Show has found âinsufficient evidenceâ to rule that participating in the programme caused his death.
Steve Dymond, 63, from Portsmouth, Hampshire, is thought to have ended his life seven days after filming for the ITV show in May 2019.
His death prompted the swift cancellation of the programme after 14 years on air and instigated a parliamentary inquiry into the broadcasterâs treatment of reality show contestants.
Unaired footage released last week showed a distraught Dymond facing boos from the audience after failing a lie detector test to determine whether he had cheated on his partner, Jane Callaghan. A senior producer on the show admitted the tests had an accuracy rate of âbetween 60-96%â.
Ruling out his treatment by The Jeremy Kyle Show as a contributory factor in his death, the Hampshire coroner, Jason Pegg, said: âThere is insufficient evidence for me to be satisfied that this was the direct cause of Steveâs death,â adding there was âno causal linkâ between his appearance on the show and his death.
Pegg concluded Dymondâs death was suicide while he was suffering from mental distress at the belief that his relationship had âirretrievably broken downâ.
He said: âThe deceasedâs decision to take his own life was made in the context of his mental distress that was probably exacerbated by his belief that a significant relationship had now irretrievably broken down following his participation on a television programme where it had been suggested that the deceased had lied to his partner.â
He added that Dymond had left notes for this family and said: âThere is nothing in those notes where Mr Dymond is critical of his treatment by the show.â
Responding to the ruling, Jeremy Kyle said the case had âtaken a huge toll on him and his familyâ. He said he had remained âsilent in the face of lies, false accusations and unfair criticism over the last five and a half years,â adding that he wanted to âthank everyone who has truly supported him through these tough timesâ.
Dymondâs son, Carl Woolley, said the âonly good thingâ to have come from his fatherâs death was the axing of The Jeremy Kyle Show.
âIn my view anyone watching the clips of the show would see that [Dymond] was in tears, and spoken to in the most brutal way by Jeremy Kyle,â he said in a statement read after the ruling.
ITV said the coronerâs findings confirmed the show had âcomprehensive duty of care processes covering the selection of contributors who appeared on the show and their care both during and after filmingâ.
The week-long inquest into Dymondâs death saw Kyle attend a hearing to defend his âdirectâ but âempatheticâ conduct on the show. In the unreleased footage from the show, Kyle is heard telling Dymond: âGrow a pair of balls and tell her the goddamn truth.â
Pegg concluded there was âinsufficient evidenceâ to conclude whether or not Dymond lied during his lie detector test. He said: âThe lie detector test recorded that Steve had provided an untruthful response to all questions asked of him.
âThere is insufficient evidence for me to be satisfied whether or not Steve had indeed lied during the lie detector test.â