
Mother's warning after daughter died from lethal cocktail of drugs
An inquest heard Rebecca Turner, 36, died in a Bangkok hotel room after taking what she thought was a line of cocaine with her partner.
The white powder she thought was cocaine was a lethal combination of drugs including painkillers, sleeping pills, morphine and anxiety medication.
'Stay away'
Her mother Anita Turner, 64, from Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex, said: 'It's so, so dangerous out there. There are loads of drug deaths all the time. It's shocking.
'I would warn people to stay away from recreational drugs out there because you simply don't know what's in it.'
She condemned Thai police and said the drugs were bought from a street drug pusher just yards from the police station on a road notorious for tourist deaths.
'There have been multiple deaths on that one road. Loads of people have died and yet the Thai police don't want to know.
'I'm absolutely heartbroken. It's been devastating for the whole family. I wanted to warn people going out there not to buy drugs. It's too dangerous.'
'Happy go lucky'
Rebecca, who was described by her mother as 'caring' and 'happy go lucky' had been travelling in Thailand to celebrate a friend's wedding in Laos in March last year.
She and Sam Melnick, 32, a self-employed gas-engineer and plumber, had checked into the Khaosan Palace Hotel on March 12 and were due to check out on March 16.
He had texted a friend on March 15 saying he had just bought some cocaine, Mrs Turner said.
The couple had planned to check out on March 16 but at midday a friend called the hotel to say Rebecca was missing, the inquest heard.
Hotel staff made several calls to the hotel room but received no answer so, as the guests were overdue for checking out, staff went to the room.
Post-mortem
On entry they discovered Rebecca lying dead on her left side on the floor near the bathroom while Sam was lying dead on the bed.
The inquest at East Sussex Coroners' Court in Lewes was told a clear plastic ziplock bag was found containing white powder,
White powder was also found spread on the sink and a bank note was found rolled up on the sink. The drug was ultimately found to be heroin.
Rebecca's body was flown back to the UK and a post-mortem was carried out.
The pathologist carried out toxicology tests and found evidence of multiple drugs in her system including morphine, monoacetylmorphine, noscapine, diazepam, codeine and trazodone.
Desperate attempt
The hearing was told Rebecca had a history of drug and alcohol misuse, depression and anxiety, but was looking forward to travelling there and was due to meet up with friends.
Coroner Laura Bradford ruled out suicide despite Rebecca's history of depression and mental health problems.
Afterwards, her mother said she had visited Thailand three times since her daughter's death last year in a desperate attempt to uncover what actually happened.
She plans to go back again in June to help assist children in schools in Bangkok which was a cause close to her daughter's heart.
Last year, six tourists - including a British lawyer - died in Laos after drinking vodka laced with deadly methanol.
Trainee solicitor Simone White, 28, was among five young women and one man who consumed vodka at the £6-a-night Nana Backpacker Hostel.
Just 4ml of methanol, a common by-product of home-brewed alcohol which is sometimes added to bootleg drinks to make them stronger, can be lethal.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Cambodians return to scenes of destruction after fleeing border fighting with Thailand
Shattered glass, torched motorcycles and a burned bust of Buddha awaited 63-year-old Soth Sim as he returned to his home in Phrong village near the Cambodia- Thailand border where fighting raged just a few days ago. As thousands of displaced people in both Cambodia and Thailand begin to venture home, some are discovering the personal cost of the nearly week-long clash which has resulted in the deaths of at least 41 people and displaced more than 260,000 others. Soth Sim decided to return to his home in Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province, which is 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the border with Thailand's Surin province, as a ceasefire between the two Southeast Asian nations seemed to take hold despite accusations of violations. He and his family of eight fled to a displacement camp in Battkhao, 60 kilometers (35 miles) away, when the firing began last Thursday. Light streamed into Soth Sim's house through shrapnel holes in the wall as he combed through what remained of his home and business to see what could be salvaged. His house had been devastated by fire and the furniture and fittings incinerated. The nearby gas station he owned and operated had also been extensively damaged. Soth Sim said he was shocked when he saw a photo of his damaged house that his neighbor had posted on Facebook"because all of our belongings, all the property that we have been earning and working for our entire lives was gone, in one moment.' He estimated the damages to his house and business will cost him the equivalent of around $100,000 and wondered how he will cope. 'How I feel is beyond sad. I don't know how else to say it,' said Soth Sim. 'But I have something to ask the United Nations, as well as any other leaders and organizations that have power: please help end the fight.' As Soth Sim gave up searching for usable parts from the wreckage of his three motorcycles, his next-door neighbor arrived on hers. Sok Duong, a 33-year-old rice wine brewer, came home to a crater in her driveway and shrapnel gashes on her roof. 'I have only this home as a shelter for me and my three children,' she said. 'This is a big problem for me because my house has been damaged. I don't know how can I live here.' The damaged roof had let in the rain, leaving parts of her home flooded. But Sok Duong was relieved to see her pen of piglets alive and well. They squealed as she fed and watered them. 'I have no money to repair the house yet, but for now I can at least feed my pigs,' she said. 'I would be very happy if the fight is at an end now. I don't want to flee anymore.' Both Cambodia and Thailand blame the other for being the first to open fire in the fighting that began last week. The ceasefire deal, brokered on Monday by Malaysia with backing from the United States and China, appears to be holding but tension and mistrust remain high.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Thailand and Cambodia trade accusations but fragile truce holds
BANGKOK, July 30 (Reuters) - A fragile truce between Cambodia and Thailand held for a second day on Wednesday, despite mutual accusations of violations, and Cambodia took military attaches and diplomats to a border checkpoint destroyed by fighting to verify the ceasefire. The visit took place hours after Thailand's military accused Cambodian forces of breaching the truce at three separate locations along the disputed frontier. The Cambodian government denied this. The two sides agreed at a meeting in Malaysia on Monday to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire to halt the heaviest fighting between the two countries in over a decade. There have been no reports of any exchange of heavy artillery fire since the truce was announced, but Thai and Cambodian troops were still massed along the frontier where fighting raged for five days at multiple locations. At least 43 people, many of them civilians, were killed and more than 300,000 people were displaced. At the checkpoint in Cambodia's Preah Vihear province, which was now a pile of concrete, bricks and metal, Cambodian military officials told foreign observers on Wednesday that Thailand had illegally captured 20 Cambodian soldiers, according to a government statement. "One of our soldiers managed to flee," said Major General Chan Sopheaktra, according to the statement. "We suspect two others may have died, but the rest are still being held by the Thai military, with no signs of release as of this afternoon." Thai government spokesperson Jirayu Houngsub said Thailand's military was currently holding 18 Cambodian soldiers who it said surrendered in Sisaket province. They had been provided clothes, food, water and medical care, he said. "They are expected to be sent back to Cambodia after a permanent ceasefire is reached," he said, adding the bodies of two deceased Cambodian soldiers had been returned on Tuesday. Referring to Cambodia taking defence attaches to the border, Thailand's vice foreign minister, Russ Jalichandra, said Bangkok would soon do the same, when it was safe to proceed. "Cambodia was able to act more quickly than Thailand because they were the party that initiated the attacks, which gave them immediate command and control over the area," he said The Thai army accused Cambodian forces of violating the truce overnight, including with small arms, grenade launchers and mortar fire, spread over several hours at multiple locations. Cambodia called Thailand's allegations baseless. "Cambodia strongly rejects the ceasefire accusations as false, misleading and harmful to the fragile trust-building process," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Chum Sounry said, adding the government supports a monitoring mechanism and independent observation. The ceasefire, which also agreed to halt troop movement, paves the way for a high-level military meeting that includes defence ministers on August 4 in Cambodia. Thailand and Cambodia have argued for decades over jurisdiction of various undemarcated points along their 817-km (508-mile) land border and there have been occasional skirmishes, with ownership of several ancient temples central to the disputes. In May, a Cambodian soldier was killed in a brief gun battle, which led to a troop buildup and a diplomatic crisis. The full-blown fighting erupted last week following Thai accusations that Cambodia had laid new landlines in the area that had maimed Thai soldiers. Phnom Penh rejects this.


The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
Fireworks workshop explodes in central Thailand, killing at least 9
An explosion at a fireworks workshop in central Thailand killed at least nine people on Wednesday, local officials said. The blast occurred in Suphan Buri province, about 95 kilometers (60 miles) northwest of Bangkok in the heart of the country's central rice-growing region. The cause was not immediately known. The Samerkun Suphan Buri Rescue Foundation reported nine deaths and said two people were taken to hospital in critical condition. The provincial government's public relations department said one person had been injured. The number of people missing was not immediately clear. Police Senior Sergeant Major Pinyo Chanmanee said the explosion took place in a building used to produce fireworks. It was not clear if it was licensed to do so. Video and photographs from the scene showed shattered wooden buildings in green rice fields. A similar incident in the same area in January 2024 killed around 20 people. In July 2023, a large explosion at a fireworks warehouse in southern Thailand killed at least 10 people and wounded more than 100, according to officials.