The family of Lady Gabriella Windsor's husband Thomas Kingston spoke for the first time in an emotional interview since he ended his own life last year to respond to his medication.
Mr. Kingston, whose marriage to Lady Gabriella in Windsor Castle was attended by the deceased queen in 2019, died at the age of 45 by suicide after he shot himself in a country house in his house in February last year.
An investigation into his death was told that he had recently experienced fear and when he took his life and had not stopped taking antidepressants for long, prescribed by a Buckingham Palace doctor.
The research led to a warning from Coroner's about the way in which antidepressants are prescribed.
His parents, Martin and Jill Kingston, have now called for a change in how antidepressants are prescribed.
In the heartbreaking BBC Radio 4 interview This morning, Mr. Kingston described his son as 'joyful, giving, full of life and caring person'.
He added: “I would like him to be remembered as someone with a big smile on his face.”
After his death, the family received more than 400 cards and letters, he said, adding: “So many of them told us things that we never knew.”
The family of Lady Gabriella Windsor's husband Thomas Kingston (photo) spoke for the first time in an emotional interview since he ended his own life last year after responding to his medication
In the heartbreaking BBC Radio 4 interview This morning, Mr. Kingston described his son as 'joyful, giving, full of life and caring person'
Reminding the tragic day of her son's death, his mother said Mrs. Kingston that she and her husband had enjoyed lunch with their son
Thomas Kingston (left) depicted with getting married to Lady Gabriella Windsor in St George's Chapel on May 18, 2019
Remembering the tragic day of her son's death, his mother said Mrs. Kingston that she and her husband had enjoyed lunch with their son.
“He was normal, he was fun. We laughed at different things. There was nothing that increased any suspicion in our mind, “she said.
After their lunch they were relaxing and reading books around the fireplace at home before Mrs. Kingston and her son fell asleep on the couch.
After a while her husband got up to walk and Thomas woke up to unload his car with things he had taken from London to be stored in a room in the country house of his parents.
Mr. Kingston said, “When Gill Tom could not find and realized that one of the rooms in the outbuildings was locked and that was, yes … I had to break the door.”
With a shaky voice, he added: “I would have trouble explaining how it was without crying.”
Reminding the tragic moment that she and her husband found their son, Mrs. Kingston