Killer of 3 in English city of Nottingham sentenced to high-security hospital, likely for life

LONDON — A 32-year-old man with paranoid schizophrenia who fatally stabbed two college students and a man in the central English city of Nottingham was told Thursday that he would “most probably” spend the rest of his life in a high-security medical facility.

The sentencing of Valdo Calocane followed three days of hearings at which relatives of the victims and three other people he tried to run heard how he had been on the radar of authorities for years and was wanted by police at the time of the attack.

Family members slammed the verdict, local mental health services and the whole legal process, arguing that Calocane should have been tried for murder, rather than for manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility as a result of his mental illness.

Doctors had argued that Calocane felt he was being controlled by external influences and that his family were in danger if he didn’t obey the voices in his head. As a result, prosecutors concluded “after very careful analysis of the evidence” that he could forward a defense for manslaughter.

In his sentencing, Justice Mark Turner said Calocane had “deliberately and mercilessly” stabbed students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, both 19, and school caretaker Ian Coates, 65, in the early hours of June 13 last year.

Satisfied that Calocane was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, the judge said the killer would “very probably” spend the rest of his life detained in high-security Ashworth Hospital in Liverpool, where he has been since November, rather than prison.

“Your sickening crimes both shocked the nation and wrecked the lives of your surviving victims and the families of them all,” he added.

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Calocane repeatedly stabbed Webber and O’Malley-Kumar as they walked home around dawn after celebrating the end of exams at the University of Nottingham, where they had both excelled, particularly on the sports field.

Soon after, Calocane encountered school caretaker Ian Coates, who was months away from retirement. Caolcane stabbed Coates and stole his van. He then ran down three people in the streets before he was stopped by police. Calocane, who had formerly been a student at the university, admitted to three counts of attempted murder relating to the pedestrians he deliberately targeted.

At the time of his rampage, Calocane was wanted by police for failing to appear in court for assaulting an officer nine months earlier, on one of several occasions when police had taken him to a mental hospital.

At the doorsteps of the courthouse surrounded by friends of the victims, Barnaby’s mother, Emma Webber, said “there’s a very good chance our beautiful boy would be alive today” police had done their jobs ”properly.”

She singled out Assistant Chief Constable Rob Griffin of the Nottinghamshire police for having had “blood on your hands” for failing to detain Calocane after the arrest warrant was issued.

She also criticized prosecutors, arguing that the families had been railroaded last November into accepting their decision to not try Calocane for murder.

“At no point during the previous five-and-a-half-months were we given any indication that this could conclude in anything other than murder,” she said. “We trusted in our system, foolishly as it turns out.”

She said the bereaved did not dispute the fact that Calocane had been “mentally unwell” for years but that the “pre-mediated planning, the collection of lethal weapons, hiding in the shadows and brutality of the attacks are that of an individual who knew exactly what he was doing. He knew entirely that it was wrong but he did it anyway.”

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The son of Ian Coates, James Coates, also slammed the verdict as well as how Calocane was able to enter a plea of manslaughter.

“This man has made a mockery of the system and he has got away with murder,” he said outside the courthouse.

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Sylvia Hui in London also contributed to this article.

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