British Cops Face Misconduct Charges Over Indian-Origin Teen O’Malley-Kumar Stabbing Case
British Cops Face Misconduct Charges Over Indian-Origin Teen O’Malley-Kumar Stabbing Case
British policeman faces misconduct hearing for sharing details of stabbing victims via WhatsApp. Families seek justice. Sunak considers public inquiry

A British policeman faced a misconduct probe after he shared details of a stabbing incident involving an Indian-origin teenager and her friend in the English city of Nottingham last year.

Last month’s proceedings revealed how the unnamed officer posted details about students Grace O’Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber as well as school caretaker Ian Coates soon after they were killed during a knife attack spree by Valdo Calocane in the central England city in June last year, according to a report in ‘The Sun’ newspaper on Monday.

Police Constable (PC) Matthew Gell is said to have passed on the “distasteful” message to his wife and a friend. “What an abhorrent way to conduct an investigation. To learn there has been internal needless voyeurism on our loved ones is unforgivable,” Barnaby’s mother Emma Webber said. While PC Gell got a final written warning, the unnamed police officer was directed to undergo “extra learning”.

Grace O’Malley Kumar

She was a 19-year-old medical student and daughter of London-based doctors Sanjoy Kumar and Sinead O’Malley. She was walking back to her university in Nottingham with Webber when they were attacked and killed. On January 25, 32-year-old Calocane was sentenced to a mental health order to be detained in a high-security hospital following a hearing at Nottingham Crown Court.

The British judge told Calocane it is likely he will never be released, so that he can receive treatment for paranoid schizophrenia – a mental illness that can be “mitigated” with treatment but not cured. He noted that he was satisfied that Calocane would not have committed his “appalling” crimes had he not been suffering from the illness.

However, the victims’ families have since met British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak about the seemingly lenient sentencing and there are reports of a possible public inquiry. ‘The Sun’ report said the bereaved families have been told that Sunak has not ruled out such an inquiry. Calocane had pleaded guilty to manslaughter by diminished responsibility for killing the two students and school caretaker Coates.

(With agency inputs)

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