By Jane Bardon.
Aaron Hyde says he was stripped naked and forced to spend long periods in isolation in the Northern Territory’s Don Dale youth detention centre when he was just a teenager.
Now his mother Tracey wants to know why he was treated the way he was and whether that contributed to his descent into serious criminality and tragedy.
She is hoping to find those answers next week when the youth detention royal commission resumes in Darwin.
Ms Hyde wants the commission to consider whether the provision of more psychiatric and counselling services to young people with behaviour problems would have helped prevent her son and many others going on to commit more serious offences — and perhaps saved some lives.
Hyde himself is expected to give evidence to inquiry that his attempts to blow the whistle on the treatment of juveniles in the centre were ignored.
Ms Hyde said the first major warning sign about Hyde was when he started skipping school to go to the skate park near their home in Palmerston aged 14 in 2011.
“Going to the skate park on his scooter gave him goals and something to develop himself in. It was the downfall of everything as well.”
As a young child he was diagnosed with ADHD, which triggered bouts of anger.
When he was 14 he stopped taking the medication, and started taking drugs and committing petty crimes with his skate-park friends.