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Nottingham attacks inquiry begins as families seek accountability
Summary
A judge-led public inquiry into the June 2023 Nottingham attacks begins, with victim families calling for individual and institutional accountability. The inquiry, chaired by retired judge Deborah Taylor, will hear evidence about police, medical and prosecutorial actions.
Content
An official public inquiry into attacks in Nottingham in June 2023 begins this week. Three people were killed and three others seriously injured, as reported. Families of the victims say the inquiry represents a turning point in their pursuit of truth and accountability. The inquiry is chaired by retired judge Deborah Taylor and will hear evidence in London.
Key points:
- The June 2023 incidents left three people dead and three seriously injured.
- Valdo Calocane, who had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, pleaded guilty to manslaughter by diminished responsibility and attempted murder and was placed on an indefinite hospital order in January 2024.
- The inquiry will examine actions by police, prosecutors and medical professionals and is being held as a statutory, public probe.
- An Independent Office for Police Conduct report previously found that officers failed to properly investigate an earlier assault by Calocane, and families have raised concerns about unauthorised access to medical records.
- Hearings are expected to take evidence through the end of May, and the inquiry chair will have up to two years to publish a final report and recommendations.
Summary:
The inquiry opens with families seeking individual and institutional accountability for failings they say preceded the attacks. Hearings will take evidence in the coming weeks, and the chair will produce a final report within the statutory two-year period.
