Mahlet Goshu Debas, 26, previously from Rainham, died in the early hours of June 13, 2024 in Surrey Road, Dagenham.
He had left the night before to buy controlled prescription drugs from a concessionaire near a supermarket, an investigation was heard, while a friend bought medications from another distributor.
Then they shared the drugs and some fell.
But when a staff member tried to wake up the lady you owe in the morning to take her prescription medications, she was found lifeless.
The paramedics came in a matter of minutes, but found rigor Mortis, the stiffness of the body, had already been presented, indicating that it had been dead for hours.
Her friend told them that Miss Debas’s drug use had not been unusual for her.
An investigation in East London Forener’s Court listened to Tuesday (April 8) that Miss Debas had long -standing problems with the illegal consumption of drugs and serious mental health problems.
It had been evicted from two previous accommodation units, including one in Rainham, due to its insistence on bringing illegal drugs to the facilities and another “challenging behavior.”
He had also marked his leg for the London ambulance service as an annoying decision, after having dialized 999 26 times in a year.
Barking and Dagenham Council described it as suffering from “a psychotic disorder, complicated by the misuse of multiple substances.”
Born in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia, the court listened to Sheard known by the British authorities when he was a teenager or fleeing from home.
As an adult, she was repeatedly arrested under the section due to her mental health problems.
On one occasion, said Forensic Dr. Shirley Radcliffe, Miss you owe “I was burning incense and wanted to set fire to the house” because he feared that an “evil spirit” was for her.
His sister described her in a statement to the Court as “a happy, active and pleasant person” who “became friends with almost any person.”
“This led her to feel pear pressured to collect bad habits of smoking and using cannabis,” he said.
The Court heard the use of Miss’s cannabinoids owed her mental health problems.
Dr. Radcliffe ruled his death related to drugs. A pathologist had given his cause of death as acute cardiorespiratory insufficiency caused by combined drug use.
“I would like to convey my deepest condolences to reaffamily,” said the coroner.