BBC News, Nottingham
The mother of one of the victims of the Nottingham attacks says “names must be named” for NHS staff involved in the failings of triple killer Valdo Calocane.
Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, both 19, and Ian Coates, 65, were stabbed to death by Calocane, who has paranoid schizophrenia, on 13 June 2023.
An independent review into his NHS treatment and care, published on Wednesday, said it showed the “system got it wrong” and identified a catalogue of errors.
At a press conference in London, Mr Webber’s mum Emma Webber said the professional implications of being named were no comparison to the loss of a family member.
The review, by Theemis Consulting, looked into the treatment given to Calocane by Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust before the killings, as well as the interactions the NHS had with other agencies involved in his care.
The report found a number of failings, including his risk not being “fully understood, managed, documented or communicated”, and identified missed opportunities to take more assertive action towards Calocane’s care.
NHS England said it was “clear the system got it wrong” and apologised to the victims’ families “on behalf of the NHS and the organisations involved”.
Similarly, Ifti Majid, chief executive of the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, apologised and said it would accept the report “in its entirety”.
Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O’Malley-Kumar, said he would be writing to Health Secretary Wes Streeting to order the mental health trust to hold individual clinicians “responsible”.
“We demand accountability,” he added.
James Coates, son of Ian Coates, said: “The report shows the failures in just this individual case.
“Imagine what’s happening with every other patient.
“To the people of Nottingham, you have been failed and will continue to be failed until changes are made.”
Since the publication of the report, which Mrs Webber described as a “horror show”, the government repeated its commitment to an inquiry into the attacks, with work ongoing to establish its scope.
But Neil Hudgell, solicitor for the families, said: “We want it to have teeth, and be judge-led.”
Mrs Webber called on the government to make the inquiry statutory, and pleaded for ministers to “make this trauma stop, and make our fight stop now”.
She added: “I do think it’s time now that we get the opportunity to meet with the prime minister.”
In response, the government repeated its commitment to an inquiry into the attacks, with work ongoing to establish its scope.
Calocane was sentenced to a hospital order in January 2024 after pleading guilty to three counts of manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility, and three counts of attempted murder after using Mr Coates’s van to drive into three pedestrians.
Speaking outside Nottingham Crown Court following sentencing, Mrs Webber said “true justice has not been served”, adding the families had been “let down” by the police and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).
A review into the CPS found that prosecutors had been right to accept Calocane’s pleas, they could have handled the case better.
And in May last year, judges ruled Calocane’s sentence was not unduly lenient.
In addition, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), is looking into prior contact that both Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire police had with Calocane.
Nottinghamshire Police has previously admitted it should have done more to arrest Calocane sooner, revealing that a warrant was issued one day before he was discharged by the NHS.
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