Cleveland Dodd was found unresponsive inside a cell in the youth wing of a high-security adult prison in the early hours of October 12, 2023.
The 16-year-old was taken to hospital in a critical condition and died a week later, causing outrage and grief in the community.
The inquest had sat for about a month in various tranches until WA’s Deputy Corrective Services Commissioner Christine Ginbey last week attempted to have the coroner removed from the case, alleging apprehended bias.
The bid failed and on Tuesday, Cleveland’s mother, Nadene Dodd, and father, Wayne Gentle, called for accountability over their son’s death at a press conference with social justice advocates.
“They want a refocus on their child. They want a refocus on the people that were responsible for their child,” youth detention expert Gerry Georgatos told reporters on Tuesday.
“There was suffering, there was horror, there was trauma, there was psychological injury, there was physical injury, there was death.”
Mr Georgatos said Ms Dodd and Mr Gentle wanted answers.
“It’s now becoming a year-long process and it’s hurting,” he said.
“It’s frustrating. It’s a sea of grief, but a mother and father are not hearing from the people that need to be heard from, and they’re seeing a system in denial and culpability in terms of accountability not being addressed by everyone.”
Ms Dodd said the process had compounded her family’s suffering and pain.
“What about the people that got all the answers and know everything [that happened] in Unit 18?” she said.
Mr Gentle said the justice department needed to be held accountable for his son’s death.
“I feel lost in this world without my son,” he said.