Finding into death of Lee Andrew Kennedy
Deceased
Lee Andrew Kennedy
Demographics
40y, male
Date of death
2005-04-19
Finding date
2008-01-25
Cause of death
Haemorrhage from gunshot wound to chest
AI-generated summary
Lee Andrew Kennedy, a 40-year-old man with a history of mood instability, migraines, and medical treatment through a GP and psychiatrist, died from a gunshot wound to the chest inflicted by Constable Erin Levay during a police response to his home. Mr Kennedy had been treated for presumed hypomania/bipolar disorder with lithium and later antidepressants by his GP. A psychiatrist at mental health services assessed him briefly (1 hour), disagreed with the bipolar diagnosis, and recommended cessation of mood-stabilizing and antidepressant medications. Mr Kennedy did not return for follow-up with his GP after medication changes were made. He was experiencing significant personal stressors: his brother's recent suicide, marital problems, and impending separation. On the day of death, Mr Kennedy called police reporting a fictitious customer refusing to leave his wife's massage business. When police entered, he ambushed them with an air pistol (appearing real), held an officer hostage, and attempted to disarm her. Police defended themselves. The coroner found no adverse findings against the police or medical practitioners. Key clinical lessons include the importance of psychiatric follow-up after medication changes, communication between GP and specialist services, and the challenges of managing patients with complex psychiatric presentations in primary care.
AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.
Specialties
Error types
Drugs involved
Contributing factors
- Recent suicide of sibling
- Marital relationship breakdown
- Planned ambush of police
- Personal grief and distress
- Medication changes without adequate follow-up
- Lack of psychiatric diagnosis clarity between GP and specialist
Coroner's recommendations
- Endorse recommendations for amendments to the Coroners Act 1985 to provide statutory protection for witnesses giving evidence in coronial proceedings, particularly to align with Uniform Evidence Law provisions and similar reforms in other Australian jurisdictions
- Acknowledge that counselling and support services are essential for families affected by non-natural deaths and endorse the Office of Police Integrity recommendation that Victoria Police take steps to provide access to such services to families affected by police actions
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