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Keir Starmer backs inquiry into failings that led to Nottingham assaults

Keir Starmer has thrown his weight behind requires a public inquiry into failings that led to the Nottingham assaults.

The households of the victims of knifeman Valdo Calocane have stated there have been “missed opportunities” to stop the violent deaths of 19-year-old college students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar and Ian Coates, 61, final June. A decide handed down a hospital order to the 32-year-old, who has paranoid schizophrenia and whose pleas to manslaughter by diminished accountability had been accepted earlier this week.

It was confirmed as we speak that Attorney General Victoria Prentis is contemplating whether or not judges ought to overview his sentence after a grievance that it was too lenient. Mr Webber’s mom Emma has stated “true justice has not been served” and accused the Crown Prosecution Service of presenting the household with a “fait accompli that the decision had been made to accept manslaughter charges”.

The Labour chief, a former head of the Crown Prosecution Service, known as the deaths “absolutely awful” as he backed the demand for a inquiry into the case. He informed ITV’s This Morning programme: “As far as the sentence is concerned, obviously there are mental health issues in this particular case, and the Attorney General has got the power to review it and I think that probably makes sense and have it double checked by the Court of Appeal.






Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar (l-r) were killed by knifeman Valdo Colocane in Nottingham
Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar (l-r) had been killed by knifeman Valdo Colocane in Nottingham
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PA)

“But I think alongside the sentence, I am very worried by what appear to be a number of points at which action could have been taken that would have prevented this happening. The family are saying that needs to be an inquiry into that. I think they’re right about that.

“I believe anyone exterior of this unbiased wants to take a look at precisely what occurred, what had been the factors of which there might have been an intervention and why it did not occur. That is the least that these households are owed.”

Mr Starmer said speaking to parents who have lost children to knife attacks is one of the most difficult things he’s done as a lawyer and as a politician. “You cannot say something, you simply need to be there,” he said.

Labour has vowed to cut knife crime in half within five years if it forms the next Government. Its plans include referring young people found with a knife to a Youth Offending Team, where they would face sanctions including curfews, tagging, or behavioural contracts, alongside requirements for parents to prevent it happening again.

Mr Starmer said the prevalence of knife crime created a culture of fear on the streets. He said: “I’ve acquired a 15-year-old boy and a 13-year-old woman. I fear, after all I do. I believe any guardian, notably with teenage kids, worries about how protected they’re on the streets. Of course they do. I’m not pleading something particular for my kids, I’m simply expressing the priority of a father, which any guardian would share throughout the nation.”

Rishi Sunak is resisting calls for an inquiry into any state failings linked to the Nottingham attacks. A spokeswoman for the Prime Minister said: “We imagine that it is necessary that as the primary motion that the related businesses look again and be certain that all the right processes had been adopted and that cheap steps that might have been taken had been taken to make sure that the place there are classes to be discovered we accomplish that. That is the very first thing that should occur.”

Asked if No10 was not ruling out an inquiry, she said: “We assume that it is proper that what occurs now’s that the related businesses look again. We’re going to let that course of happen.”