Brit who plunged to his death from window of Turkish hospital told family he was being chased by the Mafia
Billy Wallace, from Edinburgh, rang his dad in a panic from a hospital bed in Marmaris after he suffered a broken ankle when he jumped from a moving taxi
A SCOTS tourist made a chilling call to his family claiming he was being chased by the Mafia – days before he died in a mysterious fall in Turkey, an inquest has heard.
Billy Wallace, 35, from Edinburgh, rang his dad in a panic from a hospital bed in Marmaris after he suffered a broken ankle when he jumped from a moving taxi.
The council electrician claimed ''someone was after him'' and said he had become injured as he had to leap out of the cab as it inexplicably changed direction whilst driving him to the airport.
He feared he was being kidnapped.
Mr Wallace later jumped out of a window at the medical centre and as a result was moved 164 miles to Mugla Sitki University Hospital in Izmir.
But he was seen to fall again from a window sill at the hospital while staff were treating another patient in the same room.
His dad William Wallace Snr, from Charleston, Dundee, said: "We believe he went to Turkey on his own although we have since heard that he might have been with someone but nobody has been able to confirm this.
"We could silly Billy once every two months or sometimes he more. He was always busy and we would be the ones contacting him. We saw him quite recently before he went away and he was his usual, happy self.
"He had an episode of depression in 2002 and a problem with alcohol in 2006 but nothing since then. On the September 29, 2015, I received a phone call from Bill and he said he had got himself in a bit of trouble. He mentioned that there was someone after him and he mentioned the Mafia. He said he had got a taxi to go to the airport but it went the wrong way and so he jumped out.
"He said he was going to destroy his passport and when we picked it up after his death it was very damaged. He ended up breaking his ankle and was admitted to hospital in Marmaris. We made phone call to the Foreign Office to try to find what was going on.
"We spoke to our embassy in Turkey and they told us he was in hospital having broken his ankle and said that he was mentally unstable and could not fly home unsupervised. They said that his behaviour was very erratic.
"On September 30 we received a call saying that he had got out of the window in hospital and injured himself and was being moved to another hospital in Izmir. But then on October 1, I got a call asking permission to operate on him because he had fallen from a window.
''He was trying to get a taxi to the airport but the taxi went the wrong way and he got out of the moving taxi. He received a broken ankle and is taken to hospital where he is then moved to another hospital and in that hospital is seen on a window sill and falls or throws himself from it.
"We have no evidence that he was under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time of the original accident and there are a number of possible explanations as to what happened. He could have genuinely believed that someone was trying to get to him. He seems to be a fully stable character and it seems extremely unusual behaviour.
"Had this happened in the United Kingdom this would have been fully investigated. There are a number of possibilities but it seems to me very usually with someone living a fully stable life to behave in such an irrational way.
''Your son died in the most unusual circumstances and understandably you want to get to the bottom of it. Whether the police in Scotland can do anything about it is a different matter and all I can do is ask them to look into this if you wish me to do so."
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