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Nottingham massacre inquiry finds 'entirely predictable failures'
Summary
An inquiry heard that the Nottingham killings reflected long-standing structural, systemic and individual failures; the suspect has pleaded guilty to manslaughter and is subject to an indefinite hospital order.
Content
An inquiry into the Nottingham massacre heard that the deaths and injuries stemmed from long-standing structural, systemic and individual failures. The probe is examining how agencies handled Valdo Calocane, who had been sectioned several times and later discharged from specialist services despite concerns. Bereaved families told the inquiry they want the process to result in meaningful change. The inquiry is expected to run for four months with a final report due in May next year.
Key facts:
- Three people — Barnaby Webber, Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Ian Coates — were killed in June 2023, and others were seriously injured.
- The inquiry heard that Calocane had been sectioned multiple times between 2020 and 2023 and was discharged from specialist mental health care before the incident.
- Evidence was reported as not fully shared between police and health services, and an outstanding arrest warrant was not recognised at the scene.
- Calocane pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility and is now subject to an indefinite hospital order.
Summary:
The inquiry is assessing whether predictable failures across health and criminal justice responses contributed to the deaths and injuries, and families have urged that the review produce change. The investigation will continue over the coming months, with a final report due in May next year.
