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Bereaved families and MPs call for tougher measures on mobile phones for under-16s | Politics News

Bereaved families and MPs are urging the government to take tougher steps to protect younger teenagers from “horrific” content on social media. 

The Australian government’s decision to legislate for a smartphone ban for under 16s has reignited the debate in the UK about further restrictions, and a Labour MP is hoping to get government support for curbs on social media.

Stuart Stephens is among those campaigning for the government to go further and spoke to Sky News.

Olly Stephens, 13year-old schoolboy stabbed to death in Bugs Bottom fields, Emmer Green, Reading
Image:
Olly Stephens, 13, was murdered in 2021

Olly Stephens with his father Stuart
Image:
Olly with his father Stuart

His son Olly was just 13 when he was murdered by other teenagers following a row which began on social media.

Mr Stephens said his son had been trying to stand up for another child who was a victim of “patterning” – humiliating someone and circulating it on video to blackmail them. Three 14-year-olds were jailed for Olly’s murder in 2021 – following an investigation involving 11 social media platforms.

“We are angry,” Mr Stephens said. “Without a doubt, without all that interaction he would still be here.

“There’s no accountability. These platforms are put out; kids use them, people get hurt, and we need to shine a light on that.

“I firmly believe that I lost my son because of weak governance and poor legislation, full stop, which is why we are doing what we are doing.

“I can’t show you any of the stuff that we saw on his phone, but it’s horrific. And a lot of that stuff you can’t unsee. And especially as a child, you’ve got a developing brain and you bombard them with horrific stuff that’s going to change them as an adult, and that’s not beneficial for society.”

Mr Stephens added: “You think this is never going to happen to you.

“He went into his world with the mobile phone. We need to bolster the legislation that’s already there, not weaken it.”

Olly's parents Stuart and Amanda Stephens said they have been left 'completely broken'
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Olly’s parents Stuart and Amanda Stephens outside Reading Crown Court in September 2021. Pic: PA

Police searching an alleyway near to where a 13-year-old boy died in Emmer Green, Reading, after being stabbed on Sunday.
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Police searching an alleyway near to where Olly was killed in July 2021. Pic: PA

Mr Stephens supports a private members’ bill being drafted by Labour MP Josh MacAlister which would raise the age of internet “adulthood” in which a child can give data to social media apps from 13 to 16 – in order to stop them being bombarded with unsolicited content via algorithms.

This would go further than the measures in the Online Safety Act, passed a year ago, which the regulator Ofcom will be implementing in phases from next year.

Ministers have promised sanctions for tech companies who fail to clamp down on harmful material, such as violence, explicit material and disinformation, and do not implement rigorous age verification for their platforms.

The Technology Secretary, Peter Kyle, is not minded to enact a full smartphone ban for under-16s but has said that nothing is “off the table”.

Labour MP Josh MacAlister is calling for a ban on smartphones in schools
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Labour MP Josh MacAlister is calling for a change in the law

Mr MacAlister, a former teacher and now MP for Whitehaven and Workington, believes parents need to be empowered to stop their children “doom-scrolling” on social media and is hoping to get government support.

The MP, who has held meetings with parents, health professionals and tech experts, told Sky News he was concerned by figures showing the average 12-year-old is spending 21 hours a week online.

“We’ve reached a point where this is a topic of discussion at almost every family dinner table in the country. Parents, teachers, children themselves recognise the scale of this problem,” Mr McAllister said.

“We’ve got the Online Safety Act here in the UK, which is a great landmark initial piece of legislation, focused on obviously harmful content – violent images, pornography, those sorts of things.

“But in places like Australia, states in the US and France, governments are saying actually there is a wider effect of addictive social media smartphones and that’s taking children away from other activities.

“My bill is about trying to put that debate here into parliament and to persuade the government to act, to do really one simple thing through a number of measures.

“That is to make the version of smartphones that children use under 16 different to those above 16 – safer, less addictive; kick children off of them after they’ve spent a fair bit of time on their mobile.

“I don’t think that this is an issue where the genie is out of the bottle. We can absolutely set some new rules around this.”

Read more:
Nothing ‘off table’ in smartphone ban debate
Plan to ban phones from schools dropped

Susie Husemeyer is trying to restrict phone access to her daughter, Amelia, 12
Image:
Susie Husemeyer is trying to restrict phone access to her daughter, Amelia, 12

Sky News spoke to parents who feel that even legal content is taking over their children’s lives. The group Smartphone Free Childhood, set up by parents, now has 150,000 members promoting the use of “brick” mobile phones without apps.

One of its members, Susie Husemeyer, is trying to restrict smartphone use for her daughter Amelia, who is 12 years old.

After giving her a smartphone in her last year of primary school and trying to impose a time limit, she had second thoughts and has now disabled the internet on the device.

Amelia said: “I have messages, music to listen to on the bus, and calls. There’s a lot of peer pressure that’s like, how come you don’t have WhatsApp? I get a lot of my friends saying, ‘Your parents are so boring. How come your parents don’t let you do this?'”

But while her friends are often glued to their phones, she supports her parents’ decision.

“It’s not good for your mental health, especially without any restrictions.

“Sometimes I think I wish I had WhatsApp, as people will have a birthday party and set up a group chat about it and I’ll be completely left out.

“But usually I don’t. It would be easier if everyone was banned.”

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Susie said: “There is no doubt about it, she is left out. I think that parents like me are just in such a hard place because we’re trying to do the right thing by our children.

“But at the same time, our children’s peers are all using phones that have all these things enabled. And these devices are just so addictive.

“My message to government would be we are in desperate need of preserving our children’s childhoods because childhood lasts a lifetime, a good childhood lasts a lifetime, and a distracted childhood lasts a lifetime too, in terms of how the brain develops.”

Some children’s charities say a total ban on smartphones or social media punishes teenagers and ignores the benefits of phones when used safely.

Leading midwife ‘appalled’ by maternity unit’s treatment of families | UK News

A lead investigator into maternity scandals says the treatment of families failed by a Welsh hospital’s maternity unit is “appalling”.

Senior midwife Donna Ockenden says an independent review into failings at Singleton Hospital, commissioned by the Swansea Bay University Health Board, is “not fit for purpose” and should be “closed” immediately.

It comes after the maternity unit at the hospital came under considerable scrutiny in a number of internal and external reviews.

The hospital was put under enhanced monitoring by the Welsh government in December 2023 due to concerns raised by families. In the same month, the health board commissioned an independent review, but families say they continue to be ignored.

Sky News has spoken to six families who have been cared for by the trust, each raising concerns about their treatment and those responsible for reviewing it.

Sian Channon with Gethin (right), who was born with quadriplegic cerebral palsy
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Sian Channon with Gethin (right), who was born with quadriplegic cerebral palsy

“Families are the victims,” said Sian Channon, mother of Gethin, who was born with quadriplegic cerebral palsy in 2019.

She said five years on she is still fighting for answers, and her family’s request for involvement in the independent review has been dismissed.

“Families are at the very heart of what is being reviewed here. The effects are on them. It’s only right that families should actually be involved in what is written,” she said.

A recent visit by Health Inspectorate Wales in April found there had been some improvement, particularly with staffing levels and leadership.

However, they found some concerns around patient safety had not been sufficiently addressed.

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Chair of review ‘sorry’ for delays

Swansea Bay Health Board said it is fully committed to improving its maternity and neonatal services, acknowledging there is more to be done.

The interim chair of the review, Dr Denise Chaffer, responded: “We are sorry that there have been delays. There is now a determination to move forward, and the website will be launching during the week commencing 12 August, making communications much easier between the review and families”.”

However, Ms Ockenden said when she set up the review into Nottingham’s hospitals, which she currently chairs, “families were engaged from the very beginning,” adding that “you cannot have a review where the families have got such a degree of mistrust.”

“For families to say to me that they feel they are having to fight for their voices to be heard, it is shocking, it is inappropriate and it is unacceptable,” Ms Ockenden said.

Kathryn Arnold says she was told information which led her to believe she was at fault
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Kathryn Arnold says she was told information which led her to believe she was at fault

‘I was never really given straight answers’

Kathryn Arnold had her son Kingsley in 2021 and said she truly believes she is lucky to be alive after complications caused her and her son to contract sepsis. She said when she raised her concerns she was dismissed and three years later still hasn’t been given the answers she has been looking for.

“When I was in the hospital I always asked questions. I was never really given straight answers,” Ms Arnold said.

She was told information which led her to believe she was at fault.

“There was one surgeon that came back and said there can be complications with cesareans when carrying extra weight,” she said.

“I blamed myself for it all and later found out it was just an excuse and that’s false.”

She added: “They’re giving reasons and excuses that aren’t true.”

‘This is still happening to other families’

Some of the families Sky News spoke to wish to remain anonymous, like a mother who said her son died aged 13 months due to traumas they encountered at birth.

“I should’ve been playing with him in the park, taking him swimming. All of that is gone,” she said.

“This is still happening to other families. It’s not right and not fair. Lessons are not being learned.”

Another said they feel like they have been “dumped by the hospital and brushed under the carpet”, telling Sky News: “I’ve still not received the answers I deserve.

“I hope they can be accountable and there will be lessons learned, but history keeps repeating itself.”

Mother left ‘deeply traumatised’

A mother who gave birth in 2023 said she believes had she been “listened to and provided the correct, early preventative care” her little girl may still be alive.

She wanted to stay anonymous and said: “Even though a year has passed, I am still deeply traumatised by the events which took place.

“I was not listened to, and it has all been very emotionally draining, why should they listen now, when they haven’t throughout.”

Liz, who had her first child at Singleton Hospital 24 years ago and her third in 2019, said when she has asked for answers “nobody ever gets back to us, or says anything”.

“Mothers need reassurance, they shouldn’t be made to feel like we are wasting their time,” she said.

A spokesperson for the Swansea Bay University Health Board said: “We commissioned an independent review of our maternity and neonatal services in December 2023.

“This is now underway and progress updates will be provided regularly over the coming months, including how the review is engaging with families and staff.

“The review will also shortly publish its own website, which will be used to keep families up to date.

“In addition, Llais – the patient advocate body for Wales – is currently working alongside the review and is reaching out to maternity service users to secure their feedback via a range of different approaches.”

Nottingham attack families traumatised by ‘barbaric’ police WhatsApp message about killings | UK News

A police officer described the students stabbed to death in Nottingham last summer as “proper butchered” and said officers “tried to hold their inners in”.

Sky News can reveal the “disgusting” police WhatsApp message sent in the aftermath of the killings of Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar on 13 June 2023.

Their families are horrified by the language used by an officer when discussing the stabbings with colleagues.

Valdo Calocane, 32, a paranoid schizophrenic, stabbed the two 19-year-olds to death as they walked home from a night out before flagging down and killing 65-year-old school caretaker Ian Coates.

At the time, one officer messaged colleagues on a WhatsApp group.

The message said: “So 2 students on Ilkeston road have been proper butchered, 4 section [officers] turned up and tried to hold their inners in. Suspects then made off and attacked a man in a car on magdala [road] and stabbed him to death.”

Another officer, PC Matt Gell, then shared the message outside of the police WhatsApp group with his wife and two friends.

More on Nottingham Attacks

The families of Barnaby and Grace learned of the contents of the message in February but were so disturbed by its contents that they have only felt comfortable publicising it now, despite the pain it causes them.

Grace’s father, Dr Sanjoy Kumar, said the message is “so disgusting”.

Undated handout photo issued by Nottinghamshire Police of Valdo Calocane. Prosecutors have accepted Calocane's pleas of not guilty to murder and guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility due to mental illness, for the murders of Grace O'Malley-Kumar, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates, and the attempted murder of three others, in a spate of attacks in Nottingham on June 13 2023. Issue date: Tuesday January 23, 2024.
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Valdo Calocane was given a hospital order for the killings. Pic: PA

“Would anyone with a child, a mother, a relative use words like that?” he asked.

“Why have police in Nottinghamshire forgotten that these are our dear and beloved children they are referring to? I have tears in my eyes every time the message echoes in my head,” said Dr Kumar.

“The message is as barbaric as the crime for me.”

Nottinghamshire’s chief constable Kate Meynell acknowledged to Dr Kumar that some of the WhatsApp message was “crude and distasteful”.

‘Callous and degrading’

Emma Webber, Barnaby’s mother, has now written an open letter to the members of the WhatsApp group after requests to meet the officers involved were rejected by the force.

“The callous, degrading and desensitised manner of your comments have caused more trauma than you can imagine,” she wrote.

“When you say ‘a couple of students have been properly butchered’ did you stop to think about the absolute terror that they felt in the moment when they were ambushed and repeatedly stabbed by a man who had planned his attack and lay waiting in the shadows for them?

“When you say ‘innards out and everything’ did you think about the agony they felt and the final thoughts that went through their minds as this vicious individual inflicted wounds so serious that they had no chance of surviving?”

Ian Coates
Pic:Huntingdon Academy
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Caretaker Ian Coates was also murdered in the rampage. Pic: Huntingdon Academy

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‘Murderers can get away with murder’ – victims’ families

Mrs Webber’s letter also calls for tougher action for the officer involved.

“Anyone who can witness the details of such a horror as happened… and refer to lost children as butchered animals; should seriously consider their position,” she says.

“So, to the author of that message, who we understand has received a management warning. I pray you will read this and pause for a while.

“Dig a little deeper for compassion and care. Show the respect in the future that you did not afford Barney.”

PC admits ‘lapse of judgement’

The officer who wrote the message did not face a misconduct hearing but received ‘management intervention’.

In January, PC Gell, who forwarded the message to people outside the force, was found guilty of gross misconduct and given a final written warning after he looked up records relating to Calocane when he had no part in the investigation.

Read more:
Prosecutors ‘correct’ to accept killer’s manslaughter plea
Victim’s mum ‘burst into tears’ when told of sentence review

Police forensics officers search a white van on the corner of Maples Street and Bentinck Road in Nottingham
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Forensics officers at the scene after the June attacks. Pic: PA

The panel at the hearing agreed with his acknowledgement that he had “a lapse of judgement”.

A special constable was also sacked for viewing body-worn footage of the two students in their final moments.

Almost 180 police staff were found to have viewed material relating to the case, with 11 of them having no “legitimate reason” to do so.

Nottinghamshire Police referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct after the families raised a number of concerns over the investigation and police conduct, including the force’s failure to inform relatives their Professional Standards Directorate was investigating officers.

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The College of Policing is also conducting a review of how the force handled the case.

Deputy Chief Constable Steve Cooper previously told Sky News that action over the WhatsApp message was taken “immediately”.

“Some of the words were crude and distasteful. It was a single message and no images were taken or shared,” he said.

Families of teenagers killed in car collisions hope for tougher rules for young drivers | UK News

The sun rising every day is a moment that will always stick in the back of the throat of Harvey’s mum.

Her 17-year-old son was killed in a crash in Gwynedd last November, and now a daily occurrence has become a constant reminder of her loss.

“Harvey in his diary wrote that he was looking forward to the summer, spending more time with his family and friends,” Crystal Owen told Sky News.

“As soon as the sun comes out, you’re just in tears because you think he’s never going to see the sun again. It’s just all the little things that you don’t even think about.”

Harvey was one of four teenagers from the Shrewsbury area who died in a crash in the rural village of Garreg.

The inquest into their deaths has been opened and adjourned pending further inquiries.

Harvey Owen was one of four teenagers who died in a crash in the village of Garreg, Gwynedd, in November 2023. Pic: Crystal Owen
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Crystal Owen with her son Harvey. Pic: Crystal Owen

Crystal Owen, 39, has launched a petition calling on the UK government to introduce a graduate licensing scheme.

It would mean drivers under the age of 25 would not be able to travel with passengers in the first 12 months after passing their test.

“I know he would still be here if this law was in place, that’s what angers me so much,” Ms Owen told Sky News.

“Before any of this happened with Harvey, I hadn’t really looked into road safety as such because Harvey was not even interested in taking his lessons. It wasn’t on our list of things to worry about at that time.”

‘Majorly overlooked’

Ms Owen said that people should listen to the evidence when it comes to road safety.

“I remember at work, us all talking about this 20mph [default speed limit in Wales] thinking it was over the top. One of my staff actually lives in Wales and she was joking about how long it was going to take to get to work,” she said.

“The evidence speaks for itself, so I think we all just need to learn to trust it and not think we know best.”

But rural roads are “majorly overlooked” in current legislation, according to Ms Owen.

That’s why she’s calling for young drivers to have to take a minimum of 40 hours of lessons before taking their test.

Harvey Owen was one of four teenagers who died in a crash in the village of Garreg, Gwynedd, in November 2023. Pic: Crystal Owen
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Harvey was killed in a crash with three others in Gwynedd last year. Pic: Crystal Owen

‘Loveliest young man’

Ms Owen said Harvey was the “loveliest young man”.

“He’d never even had a detention, he was just a lovely, lovely lad,” she added.

“He loved his little sisters, absolutely adored them. He was just a real thoughtful, very calm, laid back sort of boy.”

Ms Owen said her family’s lives, and that of thousands of others, had been “devastated” by road traffic collisions.

“In any other way these deaths were occurring in such high numbers, there’d be an absolute outcry, but they just seem to be accepted because it’s a car crash.”

Harvey Owen was one of four teenagers who died in a crash in the village of Garreg, Gwynedd, in November 2023. Pic: Crystal Owen
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His mother said he was the ‘loveliest young man’. Pic: Crystal Owen

Ben with mum Carla (left) and sister Ashleigh (right). Pic: Ashleigh Rogers
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Ben with mum Carla (left) and sister Ashleigh (right). Pic: Ashleigh Rogers

‘They see it as fun’

Ben Rogers was 19 when he was killed in a crash in Swansea in May 2022.

Owain Hammett-George, who was 17 at the time of the crash, was jailed for six years last month for causing death by dangerous driving.

The court heard he had been driving at speeds of up to 78mph on a 30mph stretch of the B4436 in Bishopston.

Both Ben and Kaitlyn Davies, also 19, died instantly and another passenger sustained life-changing injuries.

Ben’s mum Carla King told Sky News she hoped tougher rules for young drivers, including a mandatory black box, would mean they’re more aware of their responsibility.

Ben with family dog Hudson. Pic: Ashleigh Rogers
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Ben with family dog Hudson. Pic: Ashleigh Rogers

“They just go out and see it as fun, don’t they? They show off and they speed, inexperienced, they think they’re invincible,” she said.

“I don’t recall anybody ever saying to me you’re responsible for this. You’re driving, you’re responsible for all your passengers, you’re responsible for anybody in the car you hit. It’s a weapon, I don’t think that’s drilled in enough.”

Ben on his 18th birthday. Pic: Ashleigh Rogers
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Ben on his 18th birthday. Pic: Ashleigh Rogers

‘Keep Ben’s name alive’

Ben’s sister, Ashleigh Rogers, 27, said he was “just a happy, bubbly person”.

“He was with me throughout everything. All my dark days and all through my happy times, he would be one of the first people I would tell. He was the first person who found out I was having a little boy,” she added.

“He was there a lot and it’s taunting that he won’t be there for the rest of my life, like my wedding and other things like that. But you’ve just got to remember the person that he was when he was here.”

Ben’s loss has been “heartbreaking”, Ms King added.

“I’m actually still in my bed because some days I just can’t get out of bed. It is difficult,” she said.

“Even Easter, not being able to buy his favourite chocolate and have him up for Easter lunch and Christmas lunch and buy him gifts and everything.”

Ben’s mum hopes their calls for change will help to “honour” his name.

“All we can do now is… try to keep Ben’s name alive,” she added.

Olivia Alkir.  Pic: Jo Alkir
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Olivia Alkir. Pic: Jo Alkir

‘Help them help themselves’

Jo Alkir, 54, has been campaigning on road safety for the last five years.

Her daughter Olivia was 17 when she died in a crash less than a mile from her home in Denbighshire in June 2019.

She was killed after the driver – who had only passed his test the day before – hit an oncoming vehicle while racing with another boy.

A three-part lesson based on Olivia’s story has been taught in schools across North Wales, to make pupils aware of the potential consequences of dangerous driving.

In the years since her daughter’s death, Ms Alkir has taken the campaign both to the Senedd and to Westminster.

She told Sky News a graduated driver’s licence “would have saved Olivia’s life”.

“It’s not controls as in you want to be in control of them, it’s controls to help them help themselves.”

The newly-appointed deputy head girl of her school was described by her mum as “really hard-working”.

“She and I were incredibly close. She was my only child,” Ms Alkir added.

“She was lovely company for me to be with. I loved every single second, every minute I spent with her. She was a joy to be around.”

(L-R) Jo and Olivia Alkir. Pic: Jo Alkir
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Olivia, 17, with her mother, Jo. Pic: Jo Alkir

‘Constant grief’

Ms Alkir said the loss of Olivia had left her feeling “constant grief”.

“It’s the most tiring thing a human could have because you’re just constantly battling to get out of bed and go to work. It’s a battle because all the different emotions that you’re feeling,” she said.

“She was such a bright, beautiful girl… and what her future could have been. She could have been anything.”

While it’s “frustrating” that five years on from Olivia’s death, the government is yet to act, focusing on the campaign has “really helped” Ms Alkir.

“It’s just really important for me to help her be remembered as well, because she was meant to achieve, but she is through her legacy,” she added.

“And I’m sure all the other parents who are in my shoes as well. It’s a very similar feeling I’m sure of not letting it just be in vain, not wasting what happened. Using the opportunity to make some changes.”

‘No plans’

In response to the petition, the Department for Transport said there are “no plans to introduce tougher restrictions on new drivers” but added that it is keeping licensing requirements “under review”.

“Every death on our roads is a tragedy and we continue to work tirelessly to improve road safety,” a DfT spokesperson said.

“We’ve commissioned research designed to help learner and newly qualified drivers improve their skills and safety, while our THINK! campaign is specifically targeted at young drivers.”

Families of Nottingham attack victims ‘let down’ after killer sentenced – ‘you have blood on your hands’ | UK News

The families of the three victims killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham have spoken out after a judge ordered he be detained at a high-security hospital “very probably” for the rest of his life.

The mother of 19-year-old Barnaby Webber told Nottinghamshire Police “you have blood on your hands”, as she spoke outside the court on Thursday.

In a series of missed opportunities to prevent the killings, Calocane had previously been detained in hospital four times, and a warrant for his arrest had been issued months before his deadly rampage.

Undated handout photo issued by Nottinghamshire Police of Valdo Calocane. Prosecutors have accepted Calocane's pleas of not guilty to murder and guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility due to mental illness, for the murders of Grace O'Malley-Kumar, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates, and the attempted murder of three others, in a spate of attacks in Nottingham on June 13 2023. Issue date: Tuesday January 23, 2024.
Image:
Valdo Calocane. Pic: Nottinghamshire Police


Emma Webber added: “True justice has not been served today. We as a devastated family have been let down by multiple agency failings and ineffectiveness.”

James Coates, son of victim Ian Coates, said the killer had “got away with murder”.

Ian Coates son, James,  making a statement alongside relatives of the victims, outside Nottingham Crown Court
Pic: PA
Image:
James Coates. Pic: PA

He added that Calocane had “made a mockery of the system” and if he had not been stopped it “could have been one of the most catastrophic attacks this country has ever seen”.

He blamed the police, the Crown Prosecution Service and the health service for his father’s death, saying they failed.

More on Nottingham Attacks

“All we can hope is that in due course some sort of justice will be served,” he said.

Father of Grace O’Malley-Kumar, Dr Sanjoy Kumar, described the last few days as “absolute hell”.

Grace O'Malley-Kumar's father Dr Sanjoy Kumar and brother James outside court
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Grace O’Malley-Kumar’s father, Dr Sanjoy Kumar and brother James outside court

He said the family will “never come to terms” with her loss and how she died saying Grace was a “gift to us, she was a gift to the country”.

Dr Kumar said the family never questioned Calocane’s diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia, but pointed to a “lack of toxicology [reports]” and “contemporaneous mental health assessments” during the case.

He said there were “missed opportunities” to “divert [Calocane’s] lethal calls” that will “forever play on our minds”.

Prosecutors accepted 32-year-old Calocane’s guilty pleas to manslaughter, not murder, on the basis of diminished responsibility. He also admitted three counts of attempted murder after hitting three pedestrians in a van he stole from Mr Coates.

Calocane repeatedly stabbed teenagers Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar with a dagger as they walked home after a night out to celebrate the end of their exams.

He also knifed school caretaker Ian Coates, 65, to death as he made his way to work at Huntingdon Academy in the early hours of 13 June last year.

Barnaby Webber, Grace O'Malley-Kumar, Ian Coates
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School caretaker Ian Coates, and students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, were stabbed to death. Pic: Family handouts


‘Foolishly’ trusted in the system

On the CPS, Ms Webber said the agency “did not consult us as has been reported – instead we have been rushed, hastened and railroaded”.

“We were presented with a fait accompli that the decision had been made to accept manslaughter charges,” she said.

“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.

“We trusted in our system, foolishly as it turns out.

“We do not dispute that the murderer is mentally unwell and has been for a number of years.

“However 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.”

CPS explains manslaughter decision

The chief crown prosecutor for the East Midlands, Janine McKinney, said Calocane was assessed by three expert psychiatrists, all of whom said his actions were influenced by paranoid schizophrenia.

The condition had a “significant impact” on his actions and “impaired his ability to exercise self-control”, she said.

It gave him a legal right to put forward a partial defence to murder and offer manslaughter pleas, Ms McKinney added.

On reviewing the evidence, the CPS concluded “there was no longer a realistic prospect of conviction for murder, but there was for manslaughter and attempted murder”, Ms McKinney explained.

“That is why we accepted the pleas.”

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

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Nottingham attacks: Victims’ families tell vigil crowd to ‘hold no hate’ | UK News

The mother of one of the Nottingham attack victims has paid tribute to her “beautiful boy” as thousands gathered for a city centre vigil.

Emma Webber said the killer was a “monstrous individual” but told the crowd: “He is just a person. Please hold no hate that relates to any colour, sex or religion.”

Holding a photo of Barnaby, and with his younger brother next to her, she added: “My beautiful, beautiful boy – you have mine, your dad and your brother’s heart forever.”

Families of victims speak at vigil – as it happened

The sons of school caretaker Ian Coates wore football shirts with “RIP Dad” on the back as they spoke publicly for the first time.

“It feels like he’s touched a lot of hearts over the years, more than what we assumed and knew that he had,” said James Coates.

“So it’s been really nice and heartwarming to see the messages, and people come out and talk about how he was when they were younger and how he’s helped them… some beautiful comments.”

Ian Coates sons during a vigil in Old Market Square

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Ian Coates’s sons pay tribute


Mr Coates described his father as “an avid fisherman who loved his family, and he also loved Nottingham Forest”.

He promised to support the other grieving families – “anything they need from us, we are here for them”, he said.

Grace O’Malley-Kumar’s mother also gave an emotional speech and said her 19-year-old “treasure” was beautiful on the inside as well as the outside.

“She wanted very few things in life, she wanted to be a doctor, she wanted to play hockey with her pals, she wanted to have fun,” said Dr Sinead O’Malley.

“All they were doing was walking home. They were just walking home after a night out,” she added. “This person must face justice. It is truly unfair.”

There was a minute's silence at the vigil in the city centre
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There was a minute’s silence at the vigil – and later some applause

Grace Kumar, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates
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Grace O’Malley-Kumar, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates

Grace’s younger brother, James, described her as like a “best friend” and urged the crowd to “cherish all the moments with your loved ones because you never know when it will end”.

Her father also spoke, fighting back tears at times as he said his family, like the Webbers, had suddenly “become three”.

“Imagine a world of just love and no violence. Just imagine that world,” he added.

Read more:
School caretaker ‘selfless man’ and ‘brilliant bloke’

Timeline of how attacks unfolded

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Grace O’Malley-Kumar’s mother: ‘Say prayers for my baby girl’

There was a minute’s silence in the city’s Old Market Square and – at the request of Barnaby’s mum – a moment of applause.

Tributes were also paid by the headteacher of Mr Coates’s school and the vice-chancellor of Nottingham University.

Meanwhile, police have been given another 36 hours to question the suspect in the attacks and have revealed he used to be a university student in the city.

Detectives are remaining open minded about the motive.

The 31-year-old suspect was tasered and arrested on suspicion of murder after Tuesday morning’s killings.

Grace O’Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber, both 19, were found stabbed to death in Ilkeston Road at around 4am.

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Man caught on CCTV trying to enter homeless shelter

Nottingham incident map

Ian Coates, 65, was also found dead from stab wounds in Magdala Road, with his van stolen and used to run people over in Nottingham city centre.

One person was left in a critical condition after that attack.

Video from the same morning also shows a man believed to be the suspect trying to climb into a window of a homeless shelter before being pushed out.

Ex-children’s commissioner Anne Longfield warns more families face ‘awful living conditions’ like Awaab Ishak | UK News

The former children’s commissioner for England has warned of families across the country facing “awful conditions” in their social housing, following the death of Awaab Ishak.

The two-year-old died in December 2020 from a respiratory condition caused by mould in his home, managed by Rochdale Boroughwide Housing (RBH).

There has been an outpouring of emotion after the toddler’s death, and anger from many quarters over the poor state of the home he and his family were forced to live in – leading to RBH’s chief executive being sacked.

But Anne Longfield, who until 2021 worked as the commissioner with the role of protecting the rights of children, said it was “undoubtedly the case” that other children would find themselves in the same situation.

Speaking to Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme, she said: “I think we should be shocked by this but we should be really angry too.

“These are absolutely pointless harms and needless harms, they can be prevented, that needs to be the focus now.”

She said she had spoken to families in similar circumstances, adding: “We are talking about cramped conditions but [also] cold, mould, rat infestations, places which, as the coroner said in Awaab’s case, really are not fit for human habitation.”

Ms Longfield praised Housing Secretary Michael Gove for his willingness to focus on the issue, after he wrote to every English council leader and social housing provider to put them “on notice” over the “abhorrent” conditions that killed Awaab.

Awaab Ishak
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Awaab Ishak died in 2020 because of the mould in his social housing

But she said: “My message to him would be to make this a mission. It is in plain view, it is in front of us, it is one of those things that compounds so many social problems around children growing up in poverty.

“But it needs that determination and leadership [to fix it].”

Families of serial killer Stephen Port’s victims get payouts from the Met over investigation failings | UK News

The families of three of the victims of serial killer Stephen Port have been given compensation by the Metropolitan Police over the force’s handling of the investigation into the killings.

The Met said it had settled civil claims with the relatives of Anthony Walgate and Gabriel Kovari and the partner of Daniel Whitworth.

Port was jailed in 2016 for the murders of the three men and a fourth victim, Jack Taylor.

He was given a whole life order, meaning he will never be released.

A spokesperson for the Met said in a statement: “The Metropolitan Police Service has settled civil claims from the families of Anthony Walgate and Gabriel Kovari as well as the partner of Daniel Whitworth.

“We have previously apologised to the families for the police failings in this matter and understand the impact these have had and the distress caused. We apologise again now.

“Our thoughts and sympathies are with the families as always.”

Port’s killing spree lasted between June 2014 and September 2015. He would arrange to meet his victims via online gay and bisexual social networks and dating or hook-up apps. They were then drugged, raped, murdered and their bodies dumped.

An inquest jury found that officers in Barking, east London missed repeated opportunities to catch Port after he plied his first victim, Anthony Walgate, with a fatal dose of the date-rape drug GHB.

Port struck three more times before he was caught, killing each victim in near-identical circumstances, with police failing to link him to the deaths despite detective work carried out by the victims’ family and friends that would lead to the culprit.

BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE Undated handout file photos issued by the Metropolitan Police of (left to right) Daniel Whitworth, Jack Taylor, Anthony Walgate and Gabriel Kovari. The long-awaited inquests into the deaths of the victims of Stephen Port will get under way on Tuesday. Over the next 10 weeks, an inquest jury will hear details of how four young gay man met their deaths at the hands of the serial killer between June 2014 and September 2015. Issue date: Tuesday October 5, 2021.
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Port’s victims: (left to right) Daniel Whitworth, Jack Taylor, Anthony Walgate and Gabriel Kovari.

Read more: The missed chances to catch a serial killer

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) is reinvestigating the Met over its initial handling of their cases.

The watchdog said there is evidence that the original probe into the conduct of officers was “materially flawed”.

It added that “new information” had come forward at inquests last year into the deaths of the four men.

In January, a coroner’s report on the deaths of Port’s victims identified a “large number of very serious and very basic investigative failings” by police.

This included a “lack of professional curiosity” about the cases.

Officers had denied accusations of prejudice and homophobia, blaming mistakes on being understaffed and lacking resources.

Our grief must be at ‘heart of COVID inquiry’, families of victims say | UK News

Families of COVID-19 victims have welcomed the recognition of their “devastating” bereavement at the opening of the coronavirus inquiry, but called for this to be reflected in the process.

As the inquiry began, its chair pledged to work “as speedily as possible” to make sure lessons can be learned before another pandemic emerges.

Baroness Heather Hallett warned the inquiry “will take time and have a significant cost”.

The probe was formally launched at the end of June, just days after bereaved families threatened to take legal action over delays.

Boris Johnson, the prime minister, had said the inquiry would start this spring.

Lady Hallett said all witnesses and those with evidence will be treated fairly but she “will not hesitate” to speak out about any key witnesses or organisation “who stands in the way” of the inquiry’s aim, which is to examine the response to the pandemic and its impact in all four nations of the UK.

She said she was struck by the “devastating nature” of people’s loss, and plans to conduct the inquiry in a way that “acknowledges this suffering and seeks to reduce the scope for others to suffer in the same way in the future”.

Elkan Abrahamson, head of major inquests and inquiries at Broudie Jackson Canter, who legally represents the COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice campaign, said it is of “fundamental importance” that the government fully discloses all relevant documents to the inquiry.

“The bereaved would regard anything less than full disclosure as a cover up,” he added.

Preliminary hearings will start as soon as September this year, followed by substantive public hearings from late spring next year, she said.

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Autumn COVID booster for over 50s

Lady Hallett said a “listening exercise” will begin later this year, allowing members of the public to share their story without formally giving evidence or going to a hearing.

She said aspects of the pandemic will be grouped into modules, with the first looking at whether the risk of a pandemic was properly identified and planned for.

Those who want to take part have to apply to become a core participant by 16 August, with the first preliminary hearing set for 20 September.

Bereaved families ‘need to be at the heart of the process’

Jo Goodman, co-founder of the COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice campaign said it was “an emotional day”.

“It meant a lot to hear Baroness Hallet recognise the ‘devastating nature of bereavement’ and the pain we’ve been through,” she said.

“Hopefully this will be reflected by not making bereaved families go through the stressful and draining process of applying to be core participants in every single module.

“Ultimately, all bereaved families want the same thing, which is to make sure that lessons are learnt from our devastating losses to protect others in the future.

“For the inquiry to be successful our experiences need to be at the heart of the entire process, be that the research they’re commissioning, the evidence being gathered or the hearings themselves.”

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Vaccinations expanded as COVID surges

The second module of the inquiry will look at decisions made by politicians and officials, covering issues like lockdowns, public health messaging, as well as the use of scientific expertise, modelling and data.

Additional hearings will take place in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

A third module will look at the impact of the virus and the governmental and societal response to it, focusing on patients, hospitals, health care staff, NHS backlogs, vaccination and long COVID.

Lady Hallett said “this will not be completed as quickly as some might like”, adding: “I make no apology for that.”

She said she needed time to make sure the inquiry has access to the evidence it needs and time to analyse it.

Commission launched to honour COVID victims

On the first day of the probe, the government also launched a new commission to determine how the UK will commemorate the victims and heroes of the pandemic.

Set to report back by March next year, the UK Commission on COVID Commemoration is expected to hear submissions from campaign groups and individuals on how the country should remember those who died of the virus, as well as those at the frontline fighting it.

More than 200,000 people have died with COVID in the UK.

Mr Johnson had previously announced plans to create the commission, which will be led by former culture secretary Baroness Nicky Morgan.