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Addicts left woman's body in flat for months

Andrew Buncombe
Wednesday 10 March 1999 20:02 EST
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A WOMAN lay dead her in her flat for nearly three months while drug addicts used her home as a safe place to take drugs, it was claimed yesterday.

Police confirmed they were investigating the death of 33-year-old Lisa Edwards whose decomposed body was discovered on Tuesday after bailiffs, dispatched to her south London flat over a series of unpaid bills, complained about the smell. She is believed to have been pregnant.

Neighbours, who failed to notice her absence, yesterday said they thought she had been alive because people were still visiting her flat - suspected drug users who were using the place to "shoot up".

"I heard the police break down the door and heard one policeman shout, 'I think I'm going to be sick'," a neighbour, Audrey Brown, said.

"Another one said, 'I can't look at that'. The police told me the place was full of flies and her body had rotted. They said she might have been there for up to three months.

"I feel really sick. To think I have been living so close and without realising Lisa was dead next door."

Ms Edwards had dreamt of becoming a model. She had the face, the figure and enough ambition to get together a portfolio of studio-quality photographs and lodge them with a modelling agency. But she also had a drug habit.

Ms Edwards' spiral into addiction is a classic case of lost opportunities. It is understood that 10 years ago she was happily involved in a steady relationship and was bringing up a young daughter. But after the death of her partner, she fell into drugs and a lifestyle that was to end in tragedy in a anonymous council flat.

Police were trying to trace Ms Edwards' last moments. It is understood she was last seen alive at Christmas. While her neighbours in East Dulwich knew her to be a user of both heroin and crack cocaine, people thought she was succeeding in her fight against addiction.

A former boyfriend, Adam John, was yesterday reported as saying Ms Edwards was planning to spend Christmas with her daughter. "She was a sweet thing, a nice, bubbly girl who everyone liked. She had a drug problem but was trying hard to kick it," he said. "I decided to leave her to get in touch with me. It's like that when you're trying to kick drugs - you want to make sure you are clean before going back to your friends."

Despite Ms Edwards' intention to kick drugs, it is understood that she died from an overdose. Further post-mortem examinations are still to be conducted, but a police source said yesterday: "It does seem drugs were involved. There were no suspicious circumstances."

Ms Edwards owed rent money to the local authority, Southwark Borough Council, and she had other outstanding debts. It was a private company of bailiffs that called the police on Tuesday when it could not get an answer at her flat.

Staff at Southwark council admitted yesterday that Ms Edwards had been known both to them and staff at the local Maudsley Hospital as a drug user. The council had not offered her residential rehabilitation because she had not been able to kick the habit long enough to pursue a detoxification course.

"That is the way it works," said a council spokesman. "If they do not go through with the programme they do not get offered the residential rehabilitation."

Esther Parsons, who lives below Ms Edwards's flat, said she had last seen her neighbour at Christmas, but had since heard footsteps upstairs. "We have seen people going up the stairs and then heard footsteps in the flat," she said.

"I just assumed they were junkies going to use the flat to take drugs. It never crossed my mind there could be a dead person lying there at the same time."

Another neighbour, Jean Dyer, said she had seen Ms Edwards at Christmas, bent over in the street and explaining that she thought she was pregnant. "She was a such a nice girl - she just needed a friend."

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