She says there need to be electronic records that detail the wishes of people who are at the end of life that health and care staff can access: "These electronic systems are available in some areas but not others," she says.
She said she spoke to her son on the morning of 13 March, and had no concerns at the time, but said he would have been worried about moving from an induction area to general prison because of his previous experiences.When family liaison officers told her of his death, she said it was "a complete shock", with the media reaction "extremely traumatic".
The court heard a post-mortem examination found injuries consistent with hanging, while no alcohol or illicit drugs were found in his system.Richards died a week after Anthony Binfield was found unresponsive in his cell, and 12 days before Rolandas Karbauskas died on 25 March.Ms Braybrook also expressed anger at what happened at Lowdham Grange.
"I'm disgusted that three men were able to harm themselves in such a short space of time," she said."There are so many vulnerable people in prison, and more needs to be done to protect them."
The inquest will cover circumstances around the deaths of all three men, and a jury is expected to return a conclusion next year.
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A US commentator said to me afterwards: "That was all for US domestic consumption."The vice president did, however, go on to meet the embattled Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who did his best to sound positive.
The pair had "a good conversation", according to Zelensky, who said it marked "our first meeting, not last, I'm sure". The Ukrainian leader emphasised the need for Washington and Kyiv to speak more and work together "to prepare the plan [on] how to stop Putin and finish the war"."We want, really, we want peace very much. But we need real security guarantees," Zelensky added.