Guernsey Press

Triple killer ‘heard voices and visited MI5 to ask them to stop controlling him’

Valdo Calocane was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia when he ‘brutally’ stabbed Barnaby Webber, Grace O’Malley-Kumar and Ian Coates.

Published
Last updated

A knifeman who killed three people and attacked three others was hearing voices who threatened him, and once visited MI5’s London headquarters to ask them to stop “controlling him”, a court has been told.

Valdo Calocane was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia when he “brutally” stabbed students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, both 19, and school caretaker Ian Coates, 65, in Nottingham in the early hours of last June 13.

Calocane has admitted three counts of manslaughter and three of attempted murder after hitting three other pedestrians with a van he stole from Mr Coates.

Nottingham Crown Court heard from psychiatrists on Wednesday who discussed Calocane’s mental state, with one telling the packed court room the 32-year-old heard voices telling him he needed to kill people or his family would be hurt.

Valdo Calocane in the dock at Nottingham Magistrates’ Court last year
Valdo Calocane in the dock at Nottingham Magistrates’ Court last year (PA)

Peter Joyce KC said: “He (Calocane) tried to surrender to MI5 at their headquarters to try and stop them controlling him.

“That’s not a concoction by him.

“There is a photograph taken by their systems at Thames House, saying ‘please arrest me’ – effectively ‘stop controlling me’.”

Mr Joyce said the incident happened on May 31 2021, about two years before the “desperate episode” in which three people were killed on the streets of Nottingham.

Valdo Calocane court case
Grace O’Malley-Kumar died trying to protect her friend Barnaby Webber from Calocane’s dagger blows (Nottinghamshire Police/PA)

Describing their first meeting in November, he said: “He explained he had experienced pressure, voice and persecutory beliefs.

Valdo Calocane court case
Barnaby Webber was described as a ‘hero’ by his younger brother Charlie in a video shown to the court on Wednesday (Nottinghamshire Police/PA)

“He appreciated his actions would mean he would likely end up in prison, recognising they were wrong.

“He certainly implied he felt impelled to cause vast amounts of harm.”

Mr Joyce told the court Calocane described hearing male and female voices, which would give him direct instructions and threaten him and tell him to harm hospital staff.

Valdo Calocane court case
Grace O’Malley-Kumar’s family arriving at Nottingham Crown Court (Jacob King/PA)

“He had been to his family home in another part of the country which involved a long journey, arrived there and waited outside all day, fearful.

“His family had come home but he had refused to go into the house with them because he had gone there to warn them.

“He said those who were controlling his head were controlling his eyes and could see where in the house his mother, father and brother were sitting so they could be targeted.

“He didn’t go in at all but stayed all night in the car outside to protect them.”

Valdo Calocane court case
The parents of Barnaby Webber, David and Emma Webber, arriving at court on Wednesday morning (Jacob King/PA)

Dr Blackwood said of the period leading up to the killings: “He continued to believe that this was not, in his words, a natural illness, but that he was subject to interference by malign forces.

“He concealed symptoms from his (mental health) team, he evaded their care and he did not trust them.”

Valdo Calocane court case
Defence KC Peter Joyce outside Nottingham Crown Court on Wednesday morning (Jacob King/PA)

The court was also told Calocane believed he was controlled by radio and sonic control, subjects he studied during his degree course at Nottingham University.

Asked by Mr Joyce if Calocane is “so ill… he will never be well enough to be released”, Dr Blackwood said: “I think it overwhelmingly likely that he will spend very many years of his life in secure psychiatric care.”

Dr Ross Mirvis, a consultant psychiatrist at Ashworth high security hospital on Merseyside, where Calocane is a patient, agreed with Dr Blackwood and Dr McSweeney that Calocane would not have killed on June 13 if he was not suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.

Dr Blackwood said Calocane was in the “grip of a severe psychotic episode”, saying: “As a result, he has lost sight of others’ humanity and their right to life – he is entirely driven by the psychotic process at the time.

“The assaults would not have occurred in the absence of his psychosis.”

Despite his paranoid schizophrenia, which caused an “abnormality of mental function”, Dr Blackwood said Calocane knew at the time that what he was doing was “morally and legally wrong”, which led him to rule out a potential defence of insanity.

Prosecutor Karim Khalil KC said Calocane “knew what he was about to do” as he prepared to attack Mr Webber and Ms O’Malley-Kumar from behind as they walked to their student accommodation after a night out.

Mr Khalil said: “He hid, as we know, in the shadows.

“What he did was wait in the shadows until the two students walked past and he followed them from behind. He attacked them from behind when they were at their most vulnerable.

“He plainly knew what he was about to do.”

Before stabbing Mr Coates, Mr Khalil said, Calocane lured him “from his vehicle”.

“It is plain he conducted himself in a purposeful way,” the Crown’s barrister added.

“It is clear that his dangerousness is heightened by virtue of his ability to diminish or conceal that which he is actually doing.”

Judge Mr Justice Turner, who will sentence Calocane, has a “stark choice” of imposing a “hybrid” life sentence with a hospital direction or a hospital order under the Mental Health Act, Mr Khalil said.

All three psychiatrists have suggested a hospital order would be the correct course of action.

Offering mitigation on behalf of Calocane, Mr Joyce urged the judge not to consider a whole-life order, saying paranoid schizophrenia is an “unwanted visitor” which “stalked down” a man of previously impeccable character and behaviour.

Mr Joyce said: “There are very few whole-life orders and they have all, without exception, been for offences of murder.

“This man is not before you for murder, he is before you for manslaughter.”

Addressing Calocane’s arrest after attacking an emergency worker, Mr Joyce said: “What clearer demonstration could you have that this man was by then seriously mentally unwell?

“He should not have been on the streets of Nottingham but the fact he was is not his fault.

“The man who was on the streets of Nottingham is a man who was gravely and seriously mentally ill.

“His case is essentially very simple: ‘I was ordered to do this by the voices in my head’, and any fair analysis of him says that that is right.”

The case was adjourned for sentencing on Thursday morning.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.