An autistic teenager died after being
covered in self-tanning oil and set alight during drunken ‘horseplay’ at
his 18th birthday party, a court heard.
Steven Simpson, who suffered from Asperger’s syndrome, a speech impairment and epilepsy, died from horrific burns the next day.
The court heard that as Mr Simpson became increasingly drunk at his party, he was dared to strip to his boxer shorts.
Autistic Steven Simpson (left) who died at a
party after he was doused in tanning oil and set on fire and (right)
Jordan Sheard, who held a lighter to his groin and sparked it
Defendant
Jordan Sheard, 20, who had gatecrashed the house party, was seen
taunting the host, who was openly gay, and then scrawling obscene and
homophobic insults on his bare stomach, face and forearm.
Sarah
Wright, prosecuting, said ‘it was described as good-natured fun’ but in
reality was ‘cruel behaviour’ to someone who was ‘vulnerable and an
easy target’.
After 2am, a partygoer took the
Calypso tanning oil from Mr Simpson’s bedroom and, as it was poured over
him, others chanted: ‘Light it, light it.’
Miss Wright said: ‘Steven did not object; he seemed to be enjoying the situation.’
A bottle of Calypso dry oil tan spray like the one used by Jordan Sheard to set fire to 18-year-old Steven Simpson
But
the court heard that Sheard then held a cigarette lighter to Mr
Simpson’s groin, and instantly the highly flammable liquid caught alight
and flames engulfed his body.
Instead of putting out the fire, Sheard ran away.
The
court was told that neighbour Sean Banner was the only person who
helped Mr Simpson, and burned himself extinguishing the flames.
Mr Simpson died in hospital from 60 per cent burns the next day.
Sheard,
who initially tried to blame the college student for setting himself
alight, eventually admitted manslaughter and was jailed for three and a
half years at Sheffield Crown Court yesterday.
Passing
sentence, Judge Roger Keen told Sheard that the evening had involved
‘good-natured horseplay’ but that putting a flame to a man doused in
flammable fluid was ‘a highly dangerous act’.
He also regarded the decision to run away as ‘serious aggravation’ in setting the jail term.
Miss
Wright said Sheard only vaguely knew Mr Simpson but was allowed into
the party in Barnsley, Yorkshire, last June with two friends anyway.
She said that despite Mr Simpson’s learning difficulties, he was sociable and had lots of friends.
Andrew Smith, defending, said the incident was a ‘criminally stupid prank that went wrong in a bad way’.
He
added that the defendant had been ‘deeply and significantly affected by
what he has done and the tragic consequences that ensued from it’.
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