Coronial
VICmental health

Finding into death of Frederick Joseph Williamson

Deceased

Frederick Joseph Williamson

Demographics

52y, male

Date of death

2008-03-30

Finding date

2014-08-04

Cause of death

consistent with plastic bag asphyxia

AI-generated summary

Frederick Williamson, a 52-year-old man with chronic treatment-refractory schizophrenia, was found dead in the bathroom of his room at Austin Health's Secure Extended Care Unit with a plastic bag over his head, consistent with asphyxia. The medical cause of death was plastic bag asphyxia. However, the coroner found on the balance of probabilities that Freddy's multiple facial and head injuries (involving blunt force trauma on different planes) were not self-inflicted and were consistent with assault by an unknown person. Key clinical learning: while the coroner found no fault with Austin Health's clinical management or care, the investigation failures by Victoria Police were profound—scene not properly secured, forensic specialists not called, the plastic bag not preserved for examination, and the locking mechanism not properly investigated. These failures meant critical evidence was lost forever. The coroner noted that the patient's long history of no self-harm, combined with forensic evidence indicating injuries likely from multiple impacts or assault, supported the assault theory.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.

Contributing factors

  • blunt force trauma to head and face from assault
  • lack of secure environment preventing unauthorized access
  • inadequate police investigation allowing evidence to be lost
  • door locking mechanism not properly investigated or understood by police

Coroner's recommendations

  1. Refer matter to Director of Public Prosecutions regarding potential indictable offence (murder or manslaughter)
  2. Acknowledge positive changes implemented by Austin Health in SECU following death
  3. Reiterate that integrity of coronial system relies on police properly investigating scenes and that scene examination requires timely action and specialist services; not all apparent suicides should be readily dismissed without thorough investigation
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