Killamarsh killer: Watchdog finds catalogue of probation failings

Damien Bendall is serving a whole-life order in prison for murdering four people back in 2021

Author: By Flora Thompson and Josh Payne, PAPublished 17th Jan 2023
Last updated 17th Jan 2023

A watchdog has laid bare a litany of failings by probation officers before a "psychopathic" criminal murdered three children and his pregnant partner.

Chief inspector of probation Justin Russell said the Probation Service's handling of Damien Bendall was of an "unacceptable standard" at every stage.

The 33-year-old is serving a whole-life order for the murders of 35-year-old Terri Harris, her 11-year-old daughter Lacey Bennett, her son John Paul Bennett, 13, and Lacey's friend Connie Gent, 11, attacking them with a claw hammer at their home in Killamarsh, Derbyshire. He also admitted raping Lacey.

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab ordered a review of how probation staff had supervised Bendall when it emerged he had a string of convictions and a history of violence prior to the killings.

Making 17 recommendations for improvement, Mr Russell said: "This was a deeply concerning case. The Probation Service's assessment and management of Bendall at every stage, from initial court report to his supervision in the community, was of an unacceptable standard and fell far below what was required."

His report, published on Tuesday, revealed a catalogue of errors and missed opportunities - including how Bendall's records showed an ex-partner had made allegations of domestic abuse against him and a police child sexual exploitation unit had contacted probation about him a year before the attacks.

Intelligence about the risk of "serious sexual harm" he could pose to girls was "not explored or recorded sufficiently" to inform checks to help keep children safe, according to the findings.

One probation officer questioned by inspectors, who was involved with Bendall's case in 2016, described him as "cold and calculated and quite psychopathic".

The watchdog found that at that time probation teams had been focused on his extreme right-wing views and violence behind bars, rather than the risk of domestic harm.

The report also detailed how Bendall, a one-time cage fighter, repeatedly claimed he was a high-ranking member of a white supremacist group called Aryan Brotherhood and told of having two Nazi-inspired tattoos.

But inspectors found "no evidence" that probation officers carried out checks with police to establish whether this was true after he was recorded as being prone to telling "grandiose stories", the report said.

With a history of crime dating back to 2004, Bendall is first recorded as being supervised by probation in 2011 - more than a decade before the killings.

He had previous convictions for crimes including robbery, attempted robbery and grievous bodily harm. Just months before carrying out the murders he was handed a 24-month suspended sentence for arson.

Probation staff decided Bendall was suitable to be subject to a curfew at home with Ms Harris after being sentenced for arson. But officers "came to this wholly inappropriate conclusion without speaking to Ms Harris, visiting the property, conducting domestic abuse inquiries, or taking into account past domestic abuse claims", Mr Russell said.

Bendall was classed as a posing a medium risk of serious harm to the public and a low risk of posing serious harm to partners and children - an assessment which Mr Russell concluded "underestimated the risks" posed, and "had serious consequences".

He added: "Probation managers and practitioners took the risk assessment from the court report as a given, and missed several opportunities to scrutinise and change it.

"If Bendall had been assessed as presenting a higher risk of serious harm - which would have been appropriate - it is unlikely a curfew order would have been deemed suitable and he would have been assigned to more experienced and confident probation officers."

He was then supervised by "insufficiently qualified and experienced" probation officers as a result, the watchdog found.

What are the Probation Watchdog's recommendations after the Killamarsh review?

The probation watchdog made a string of recommendations after identifying a series of failings in how the case of Damien Bendall was handled.

Chief inspector of probation Justin Russell, made 17 recommendations to the Probation Service and the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), calling for staff to make sure better and more thorough checks are carried out when considering the risks posed by criminals.

They include:

- Carrying out domestic abuse checks on all criminals who are sentenced to make sure risk assessments in court reports are accurate and any proposals are safe.

- Making sure child safeguarding checks take place in all cases where the criminal being sentenced "lives with, is responsible for, has access to, or is likely to have a negative impact on the wellbeing or safety of a child".

- Getting consent from other adults living at an address before recommending a criminal has curfew conditions imposed there.

Mr Russell, who has previously raised concerns about the heavy workloads faced by some probation officers, said the amount of work given to staff should be reviewed and monitored to make sure there is sufficient oversight by managers.

He also called on the MoJ to change laws to be "more prescriptive" of information that should be obtained and considered by courts to "assure themselves of the safety of other household members at a proposed curfew address before they impose an electronically monitored curfew".

Until this is carried out, Mr Russell said guidance should be issued to court staff requiring them to "satisfy themselves that relevant checks have been undertaken by the probation courts team."

Prisons and Probation Minister Damian Hinds said:

“These were appalling crimes. The Chief Probation Officer has apologised to the victims’ families for the unacceptable failings in this case and disciplinary action has been taken against two members of staff.

“The extra funding of £155 million a year we have put into the Probation Service is being used to recruit thousands more frontline staff and to ensure domestic abuse and child safeguarding checks are always carried out before any offender is given a curfew.

“The Probation Service has also improved information sharing with police and councils, so no family is put at such significant risk again.”

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