British soldier took her own life after sexual harassment from boss, says army

A 19-year-old soldier is believed to have taken her own life after sexual harassment from her boss, according to an internal army inquiry report.

Royal Artillery Gunner Jaysley Beck was found dead at Larkhill Camp in Wiltshire in December 2021 after experiencing “an intense period of unwelcome behaviour”, the inquiry report said, according to the BBC.

The internal review, due to be published later on Wednesday, details how Beck received more than 1,000 messages and voicemails from her boss in October 2021. In November, the messages increased to more than 3,500. The boss is not named in the report.

“It is almost certain this was a causal factor in her death,” the report said. In the weeks before her death, she messaged her boss to say: “I can’t handle it any more. It’s weighing me down.”

Speaking to the BBC, Beck’s mother, Leighann McCready, said: “You’d think the easiest solution is block him, you can’t just block your boss.” She said her daughter was reluctant to report the behaviour because of how a previous sexual assault complaint was dealt with by the army.

McCready said: “She was always down, she was fed up of his behaviour, [and] it just started ruining a job that she really enjoyed doing.”

The report also said family issues including a bereavement may have been responsible for Beck’s death. But her mother rejected this telling the BBC: “I think they are trying to put a lot on her family. They have said that we are partly to blame for the passing of our daughter.”

An inquest date to determine how the 19-year-old died has yet to be set. Beck, who joined the army at 16, had no diagnosed mental health conditions, according to the report. Britain is one of 19 countries that recruit 16-year-olds into the army.

The report found significant evidence of inappropriate sexual behaviour from male soldiers towards female soldiers at the Larkhill garrison, with one witness describing routinely receiving comments from male soldiers that were “vile” and “degrading”, according to the Centre for Military Justice (CMJ), which is representing the family.

The case raises wider questions surrounding the culture at army barracks which have come under intense scrutiny in recent years for a “culture of institutional misogyny”. In 2021, a parliamentary report said the UK military was failing to protect female recruits. If revealed nearly two-thirds of women in the armed forces had experienced bullying, sexual harassment and discrimination during their career – which later resulted in an overhaul by the MoD into how complaints are handled.

In July 2021, Beck had been sexually assaulted by a warrant officer while on exercises. The CMJ said the incident was reported but not referred to police, and there “appears to have been no meaningful investigation”. In a letter of apology to Beck after the incident, the perpetrator wrote his “door will always be open”, according to the CMJ.

“This is something my daughter will have to carry, or would have had to carry for the rest of her life,” said McCready.

An army spokesperson said: “Our thoughts and sympathies remain with Gunner Jaysley-Louise Beck’s family and friends at this difficult time.

“The circumstances surrounding Gunner Beck’s death, including the cause, are still to be determined by the coroner. It would be inappropriate to comment further until the oroner’s inquest has been completed.”