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Dog walker's family 'treated like dirt' after learning his killer can leave hospital

The family of a dog walker killed by a psychiatric patient say they have been 'treated like dirt' by the NHS after learning his attacker has been granted permission to leave hospital.

Lewis Stone was stabbed to death by David Fleet in a random attack in Borth, Wales, in 2019, shortly after Mr Fleet had been released into the community. Mr Stone's family were informed of the update to his care just hours after Sky News aired their first TV interview calling for an internal NHS Trust report into its handling of Fleet's case to be released.

Mr Stone's stepdaughter, Vicki Lindsay, told Sky News: "As victims, we have been treated disgracefully. "We still do not know why the killer was released 10 days before he attacked Lewis, who made that decision and why, and who is going to be held accountable for it.

"But as if all that were not bad enough, only six years on, we now get to live knowing that the killer is now allowed out at night time." Ms Lindsay also told Sky's Sarah-Jane Mee that "my biggest fear is that it's going to happen again - I can't sleep at night thinking about other families going through what we've gone through". Mr Fleet was sectioned under the Mental Health Act after admitting manslaughter with diminished responsibility.

He was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia at the time of the attack and told psychiatrists that if he had not stabbed Mr Stone, the voices in his head "were going to kill him". Patients who have committed a mental health-related homicide can be granted permission to leave their hospital under Section 17 of the Mental Health Act.

It is considered part of the patient's rehabilitation and preparation for eventual discharge. What has the MoJ said? A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "We understand this decision will be difficult for the Stone family, and our thoughts are with them.

"Any decision to approve access to the community is only made after a thorough risk assessment and with strict safeguards in place." The Hywel Dda health board says it does not intend to release an internal report into Fleet's care. Sharon Daniel, the interim executive director for nursing, quality and patient experience, said: "The duty of candour for patients came into force in Wales in April 2023.

"At the time of this incident and concern, we fulfilled our duties to be open." A senior NHS official has called the decision not to release the internal report "callous and uncaring". Speaking on condition of anonymity, they said: "On the face of it, this family has been failed multiple times over.

"Of course, there is a balance to be struck between the rights of the family and the rights of the person detained, but the basic lack of transparency and consideration here undermines the duty of candour." Freedom of Information requests made by the victim's support organisation Hundred Families have found that nearly 400 people were killed by former mental health patients between 2018 and 2023. However, this number is expected to be a significant underestimate as a quarter of NHS Mental Health Trusts refused to say how many of their patients went on to kill, as they don't want to risk identifying offenders.

Read more from Sky News:Van driver 'took 20 lines of coke' before killing toddler in crashOpen water events without regulation 'risk future deaths', warns coroner Julian Hendy, who founded Hundred Families, said: "Unfortunately the family of Lewis Stone is not alone. There is a terrible lack of openness and transparency and that needs to change.

"The public needs to know that mental health services are keeping people safe and learning effectively when things go wrong. "At the moment, by failing to share information the public cannot be reassured.".

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