Friday, July 12, 2024 - An inquest has heard how a mother told
police, ‘I knew I was going to kill someone today’, after b3ating a pensioner
to death in a Co-op supermarket, an inquest heard.
Eunice Rees, 87, waited in the car as her childhood lover
John, 87, went into the Penygraig Co-operative supermarket at Rhondda, South
Wales, to shop.
The retired engineer never returned after Zara Radcliffe,
34, battered him with wine bottles and a fire extinguisher as he tried to stop
her from attacking a nurse with a knife.
Radcliffe, who has paranoid schizophrenia, beat John, a
churchwarden so hard with a wine bottle it broke, before picking up another
bottle and hitting him in the face and head a further 21 times as he lay on the
aisle floor, an inquest into his death heard.
John Rees, described by the coroner as ‘a private, quiet,
and humble man’, died from severe blunt force facial injuries, a post-mortem
examination found.
When Radcliffe was arrested inside the shop, ‘she was calm’,
Sergeant James Pearce said.
‘She spoke softly and had a manner of indifference about her
which resonates to this day. She said words to the effect of, “I knew I was
going to kill someone today”‘.
The 34-year-old mum-of-two later admitted manslaughter by
way of diminished responsibility and was sentenced to an indefinite hospital
order.
She also pleaded guilty to three charges of attempted murder
of Lisa Way, 53, Mr Price, 58, and Gaynor Saurin.
Radcliffe had been released from a mental hospital with ‘no
negotiated crisis plan’ a few months before the May 2020 attack.
There were ‘warning signs’ of her ‘rapid deterioration’ leading up to Mr Rees’ death, an independent review commissioned by Cwm Taf Morgannwg Safeguarding Board found.
But the dangers were ‘not recognised or poorly processed’
before she was discharged.
Radcliffe had spent two months in a mental hospital after
hearing ‘voices’ in her head in late 2019, and she believed doctors were trying
to kill her.
No longer taking her medication, Radcliffe’s family were
worried about the care she was receiving from mental health services leading up
to the attack.
‘She came out of hospital and she was ok, but there wasn’t
any aftercare’, according to her sister Kylie, who described their relationship
as ‘very close’.
‘I had a feeling something would happen and it would take
something serious for them to realise how ill she was.’
On the day of the supermarket attack, Radcliffe had told her
sister ‘delete my number’ in a series of strange text messages, the inquest
heard.
Kylie replied: ‘Stop this paranoid stuff, you’re making
yourself ill. You have done this a few times and you know this is the start of
you going ill.
‘Please stop this and take your tablets love.’
In another message, she said: ‘Take your tablets, Zara. You
should know now these thoughts are not real love they are all in your head.
‘Soon as you take your tablets you’re alright.’
With no reply from Zara, Kylie ‘started to worry’, calling
the phone of her parents to try to track down her sister.
Then her son told Kylie ‘There had been a stabbing in
Penygraig’.
Paul Mears, chief executive of the Cwm Taf Morgannwg
University Health Board, called it ‘a tragic case that has impacted upon the
lives of many people’.
He said: ‘We apologise to Miss Radcliffe and her family for
any instances in which her care fell short of the high standards we set
ourselves.
‘We requested this external review to ensure all
opportunities for learning and improvement could be identified.’
Mr Rees was posthumously awarded the Queen's Medal for
gallantry for saving nurse Gaynor Saurin from Radcliffe’s attack.
Prosecutor Michael Jones KC told a hearing that Mr Rees’s effort to stop Radcliffe was ‘a selfless and brave act which cost him his life.'
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