The Herald

Nottingham attacker ‘should have sentence changed to life imprisonme­nt’, court hears

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THE man who killed three people in a spate of attacks in Nottingham last year should have his sentence changed to one of life imprisonme­nt, the Court of Appeal has heard.

Valdo Calocane was given an indefinite hospital order after admitting the manslaught­er by reason of diminished responsibi­lity of Barnaby Webber, Grace O’malley-kumar and Ian Coates, and the attempted murder of three others last June.

Prosecutor­s accepted the 32-year-old’s not guilty pleas to murder charges at his sentencing hearing in January after medical evidence showed he has paranoid schizophre­nia.

But Attorney General Victoria Prentis referred the sentence to the Court of Appeal in February, with lawyers telling a hearing yesterdayo­n Wednesday that it was “unduly lenient”.

Deanna Heer KC, representi­ng the Attorney General’s Office (AGO), said Calocane should instead be given a life sentence as part of a “hybrid” order, where he would be treated in hospital before serving the remainder of his sentence in prison. She said: “The exceptiona­l level of seriousnes­s of the offences was such that the case required the imposition of a sentence with a penal element, an element of punishment.

“The harm caused and the harm risked to members of the public by his crimes was extreme.”

Several members of the victims’ families and friends attended the hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice while Calocane attended via video link from Ashworth highsecuri­ty hospital near Liverpool.

He fatally stabbed 19-year-old university students Mr Webber and Ms O’malley-kumar 10 and 23 times respective­ly as they walked home from a night out in the early hours of June 13 last year in what prosecutor­s described as an “uncompromi­singly brutal” attack.

He then went on to stab Mr Coates, a 65-year-old school caretaker, 15 times and stole his van which he used to knock down three pedestrian­s – Wayne Birkett, Marcin Gawronski and Sharon Miller – in Nottingham city centre before being arrested.

He declined to give toxicology samples and gave no comment in police interview.

Calocane’s sentencing hearing was told that multiple medical experts concluded he had paranoid schizophre­nia, with the court hearing he had several interactio­ns with mental health services in the months before the attacks. He was sentenced by Mr Justice Turner to an indefinite hospital order and made subject to further restrictio­ns if he is ever charged, which must be approved by the Justice Secretary.

One expert, Dr Nigel Blackwood, said the attacks were “entirely driven” by psychosis and that he was in “a severe psychotic episode”.

 ?? ?? Triple killer Valdo Calocane admitted manslaught­er
Triple killer Valdo Calocane admitted manslaught­er

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