Steve Dymond death: Jeremy Kyle said he would not trust tragic Portsmouth guest 'with a chocolate button' during his appearance on ITV show

TV presenter Jeremy Kyle called tragic guest Steve Dymond a ‘serial liar’ and said he ‘would not trust him with a chocolate button’, a coroner has revealed.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

And the ITV star also made the comment: ‘Has anyone got a shovel?’ featuring the 63-year-old.

Mr Dymond is suspected to have taken his own life seven days after the recording the episode, he was found dead in his rented room in Grafton Street, Buckland on May 9 last year.

Read More
Jeremy Kyle could have 'caused or contributed' to death of Portsmouth's Steve Dy...
Steve Dymond and his fiancee Jane CallaghanSteve Dymond and his fiancee Jane Callaghan
Steve Dymond and his fiancee Jane Callaghan
Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Hampshire coroner Jason Pegg laid out the remarks made by Mr Kyle in his ruling stating that Mr Kyle would be an interested person in the inquest because ‘he may have caused or contributed’ to Mr Dymond’s death.

A preliminary hearing has been told that Mr Dymond died of a morphine overdose and a heart problem at his home in Grafton Street.

He had ‘failed’ a lie detector test for the programme to show whether he had cheated on his ex-fiancee Jane Callaghan, from Gosport.

Mr Pegg states in his ruling made in July: ‘I have had the opportunity to view The Jeremy Kyle Show episode featuring the deceased.

Jeremy Kyle Picture: Anthony Harvey/Getty ImagesJeremy Kyle Picture: Anthony Harvey/Getty Images
Jeremy Kyle Picture: Anthony Harvey/Getty Images
Hide Ad
Hide Ad

‘In that footage it is apparent that Jeremy Kyle was aware that the deceased had previously been unable to appear on The Jeremy Kyle Show having been diagnosed with depression, for which the deceased had been prescribed anti-depressant medication.

‘After the lie detector results the deceased looked visibly upset.

‘Jeremy Kyle adopted an approach where he called the deceased a ‘serial liar’; that he ‘would not trust him with a chocolate button’; and made a comment: ‘Has anyone got a shovel?'’

The ruling quotes Mr Dymond’s son, Carl Woolley, who says of his father: ‘He had been humiliated, taken for a mug and pounced on by the presenter (Kyle).’

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Woolley also reports that his father had told him day after the filming that he had ‘been made out to be the baddy and that Jeremy Kyle was constantly on him. He felt embarrassed and made to feel like nothing’.

The ruling also quotes Mr Dymond’s brother Leslie Dymond, who says his brother phoned him from a taxi after the filming of the episode.

The report states: ‘During that conversation, the deceased told his brother: ‘He had endured a terrible time and could not go on living.’

‘In subsequent conversations Leslie Dymond recalls his brother stating: ‘Jeremy Kyle had been in his face and followed when he left the stage … He was jeered and called a failure by the presenter (Kyle).'’

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Pegg concludes: ‘I am satisfied that the evidence potentially goes beyond mere criticism of Jeremy Kyle and that acts or omissions of Jeremy Kyle may have caused or contributed to the death of Stephen Dymond, the deceased.

‘Accordingly, I deem Jeremy Kyle to be an interested person in this case.’

Counsel for Mr Dymond’s family, Caoilfhionn Gallagher QC, told a pre-inquest review hearing in Winchester last week: ‘The inquest must consider how he came to be on the show in the first place considering his pre-show assessment, and it was known he had been on anti-depressant medication and had stopped it to go on the show.’

She said that Mr Kyle had been given briefing notes about Mr Dymond’s situation and had made reference during the show to him stopping his medication.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A full inquest into Mr Dymond’s death is set to be held in the summer of 2021.

A message from the Editor, Mark Waldron

You can subscribe here for unlimited access to Portsmouth news online - as well as less adverts, access to our digital edition and mobile app.

Our trial offer starts from £2 a month for the first two months.

Related topics:

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.