The above tweet has since been taken down.Jordan's 25-year-old sister Abigail Burling was found not guilty of manslaughter, as well as an alternative charge of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable person.
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TIME LINE
The case of the Cranstons
- June 30 in 2016
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Dawn Cranston phones 999 and asks for an ambulance because she is concerned about her son Jordan's health.
She tells the call handler her son has been 'poorly for a few months' and is 'having problems breathing'.
Minutes after the paramedics arrive at Dawn's house in Farnley, Jordan goes into cardiac arrest and dies.
During the trial, Nicholas Lumley QC, prosecuting, said: "What met the eyes of the paramedics was a shocking and disturbing scene.
"Jordan was lying, utterly helpless, on an inflatable mattress in a cluttered living room.
"He was little more than skin and bones. He weighed 37kg, less than 6 stones.
"He wore a soiled nappy under some pyjamas."
Police officers are then called to the scene.
During the trial, PC Ben McNamara said when he arrived at Dawn's home the first thing she asked was “How much does a funeral cost?”
- July 2016
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Dawn's house is searched by police.
When officers are searching a wardrobe in Jordan's room, they find a rucksack that has several plastic bags inside.
Inside one of those plastic bags is the remains of a baby boy that Dawn had given birth to in the 1990s.
Dawn later tells the police and the jury that it was a still birth and she put the child inside the bags when she was sure he was dead.
During the trial, Mr Lumley said: "As the police handled the rucksack, taking it down from the place where it would have been, a rancid smelling liquid began to seep from the layers of bags.
"Amongst the liquid were tiny bones. All that remained of a baby boy."
Dr Kirsten Hope, a Home Office pathologist, also carried out an autopsy on Jordan's body.
During the trial, she told the court there were signs of malnutrition and dehydration, large pressure ulcers, no muscle in his thighs and a weakness in his bones.
- August 2016
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Five weeks after Jordan's death, his mother is arrested after she returns home from a shopping trip.
During her first police interview, she tells police: “I’m depressed, I didn’t do anything. He wouldn’t let me do anything. I cared for him. He wouldn’t let me help him.”
But when she is asked about the bones found in the bag and whether she has any link to it, she makes no comment.
Photos of the bag and the cupboard where it was found are shown to her and she still makes no comment.
A DNA sample is taken from her while she is in custody.
She is then released and re-interviewed in January 2017.
Denise Cranston - Jordan's grandmother - is also arrested and interviewed by police.
During the interview, she tells officers 'no one' was responsible for Jordan's death.
She says her grandson has decided to stop walking one day because 'something had gone in his leg' and refused to leave his chair.
He refused to see a doctor, started eating less, regularly soiled himself and developed bed sores, she claims.
Abigail Burling was arrested and questioned by police too.
Abigail tells police she did not have a duty of care to her brother Jordan and no one was responsible for his death.
She describes him as a 'typical 18-year-old guy' who was 'cheeky' and 'very independent'.
She also claims he was a 'clean freak' who was 'fit as a fiddle' and said she saw him playing football the day before he died.
- September 2016
Sandra Burling - Jordan's aunt - gives a statement to police.
She tells police that she saw her nephew shortly before Christmas in 2015 and he looked 'very ill' , and 'gaunt'.
Sandra says she asked Jordan about his health and he said he was ill because he had eaten something that didn't agree with him.
She also admits that Dawn had told her Jordan was depressed and after he turned 18 he refused to listen to anyone.
- January 2017
During her second police interview, Dawn is asked about Jordan’s medical problems, his missed medical appointments, her pregnancy with Jordan and previous pregnancies, her own childhood and who cared for her children.
She makes no comment.
The next day, she is interviewed again.
She is asked whether the baby was alive when he was born, when that baby was born, what involvement Steven Burling (Jordan’s father) had in his son's life, why Jordan was taken out of school and why she hadn’t called the doctor for Jordan.
She again makes no comment.
During the trial, she is asked why she repeatedly responded with 'no comment' during police interviews.
She told the court "I took the advice of the people around me.
"At that point I thought it was the right thing. I didn’t feel I was ready to talk as much as I can now.’
She later pleads guilty to endeavouring to conceal the birth of a child between January 1992 and June 2016, and is charged with manslaughter and an alternative charge of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable adult.
Denise is then charged with manslaughter and an alternative charge of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable adult.
- June 2017
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Dawn Cranston, 45, Denise Cranston, 70, and Abigail Burling, 25, appear at Leeds Crown Court to stand trial.
They are accused of manslaughter and face an alternative charge of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable adult.
- July 2017
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Dawn and Denise are convicted of his manslaughter by the jury at Leeds Crown Court.
The pair show no emotion as they are told that they have been found guilty of manslaughter by unanimous verdict.
Abigail is found not guilty of manslaughter, but found guilty of an alternative charge of causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable person.
He had not been to school since he was 12, the court heard. Teachers at his primary school remember him defecating on the floor and said he had head lice. He had not seen a dentist since 2009, when 16 of his teeth were treated, including four extractions.
“From the time Jordan was taken out of school, he became increasingly anonymous. Education and social services played little part in his life,” Lumley told jurors.
Relatives convicted over death of emaciated teenager
The teenager left to waste away
I totally accept others views and that I am in the minority. It's more of a gut feeling for me than anything else that this case solves nothing because of their mental health issues and it almost feels like they are being held up for ridicule. I don't in any way wish to stand in the way of others posting agreement with the verdict. I appreciate all opinions.
All three defendants are likely to be sentenced later this week.
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Mother and grandmother guilty of manslaughter over teen 'left to rot' at Leeds house