CCTV shows killer walking calmly out of mental health unit before murdering grandmother, as report lists the failures that led to death  

Shocking CCTV footage has shown the moment a killer walked calmly out of a mental health unit before murdering a grandmother.

Nicola Edgington
Nicola Edgington killed grandmother Sally Hodkin, 58

A report into the psychiatric patient's brutal murder of a 58-year-old grandmother said a catalogue of failings by the NHS and police led to the death. 

Nicola Edgington virtually decapitated Sally Hodkin with a butcher's knife in Bexleyheath, south-east London, in 2011, six years after killing her own mother.

On the day of the murder, Edgington repeatedly called police to beg for help and told A&E staff she needed to be sectioned and felt like killing someone.

Although she was taken to Oxleas House mental health unit in Greenwich to be admitted, she was able to freely walk out of the unit to commit the crime.

Now a damning report, commissioned by NHS England, has concluded that a series of mistakes contributed to Mrs Hodkin's death.

Sally Hodkin, 58
Sally Hodkin, 58 Credit: PA

Two members of staff from Oxleas were later dismissed after giving inaccurate accounts of what happened as Edgington absconded on the day of the murder.

They said she forcefully pushed through the unit's doors and that they went out to search for her.

But CCTV footage showed that in fact she had calmly walked out of the building and was not pursued by any member of staff.

Her family said Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the mental health services, must take the bulk of the blame for what happened.

Her son Len said his mother's death was "entirely preventable".

 Sally Hodkin 58, with her family
 Sally Hodkin, 58, with her family Credit: PA

Edgington was convicted in 2006 of the manslaughter of her mother, Marion, and ordered to be detained indefinitely under the Mental Health Act.

But staff at the Bracton Centre, run by Oxleas, deemed her fit for discharge after three years and she was released in 2009 and allowed to live in the community.

Investigators behind the new report said Bracton Centre staff were too willing to accept Edgington's version of events and said documents failed to detail all the concerns about her behaviour before discharge.

After she was set free, Edgington was moved to accommodation with low levels of supervision and was also allowed to visit her husband in Jamaica.

 Sally Hodkin 58, with her family
Len Hodkin with his mother Sally Hodkin Credit: PA

The report said Oxleas staff failed to take seriously warnings made by her brother and sister that Edgington was still unwell and potentially dangerous.

Edgington's husband in Jamaica also told staff she was violent and had threatened him with a knife.

The report said: "(Her) potential risk of violence to others in the community was not adequately considered by her care team."

On the day of the murder, when Edgington was at hospital waiting to be taken to Oxleas House mental health unit, mental health staff missed an opportunity to give her the highest risk rating.

"This observation level assessment and the consequent poor follow-up within Oxleas House gave (her) the opportunity to leave Oxleas House without challenge," investigators said.

The report also pointed to missed opportunities by the police to section Edgington under the Mental Health Act on the day of the murder.

Several of Edgington's 999 calls from the A&E department were also downgraded because she was considered to be in a place of safety and an officer was not asked to return, despite Edgington saying she could be very dangerous.

Mrs Hodkin's son Len Hodkin, 40, a solicitor from Eltham, said Edgington should "never have been released in the first place" after killing her own mother and should have been "recalled to hospital when her behaviour deteriorated" after she was discharged.

"She killed her own mum in 2005. She was released after just three years back into the community," he said.

"This isn't right and doesn't sit right with us.

"And when there were opportunities for her to be recalled back after discharge, the trust didn't do that because their concern isn't for the safety of the public or how much of a danger she is to anyone else, their primary concern is 'is she unwell?' and 'is she taking her treatment?"'

The family has accepted an out-of-court settlement from Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust after filing for damages.

In February, it emerged that the Metropolitan Police had taken High Court action to try to suppress publication of the new report, describing it as "unlawful and irrational".

License this content