A man who killed his partner in a car in East London and removed his brother from all around before confessing his brother, was sentenced to the hospital order.
25-year-old Kennedy Westcar-Saroche was found dead on 6 April last year in a Vaxhall car in Whiston Road, Hakni.
Her boyfriend, Gogo Lois Tape, 28, admitted to murder due to the first low responsibility and carrying a knife. Inner London Crown Court heard that he used the cannabis and was “schizophrenia” schizophrenia at the time of the attack.
After the first hearing, the Kennedy Westcar-Saroche family demanded a review of the sentence tape.
Tape killed his long -term girlfriend, with which he shares a young daughter on the evening of 5 April last year.
He died due to “manual compression to the neck”, the Inner London Crown Court earlier heard.
He was punched several times and other wounds were suggested that he had tried to defend himself from a knife attack.
After killing him, Tape took his body to the passenger seat from the driver’s seat, cut the seat belt and went away.
Later he bought cigarettes and pretending to be suffering, used Ms. Westr-Sarocha phone to recite his friend.
The next morning, he confessed his brother.
After taking custody, Tape said to the authorities: “I lost my head, I have been losing my head for the last two or three years.”
Subsequently, a court was told that the mental health of the defendant started declining in 2023, in which the tape went mad and then envy.
He had some contact with mental health services that year and was warned to avoid canbis, which he smoked since 2014.
Judge Freya Nuberry said he was a “uncontrolled schizophrenic” at that time, who had “paranoid and harassment confusion”.
About 40 of the loved ones of Ms. Westr-Sarocha were sitting in court on Monday as the tape was ordered a hospital under the Mental Health Act, which could detain him indefinitely.
Linda Westcar, mother of Ms. Westcar-Sabarocha, told reporters outside the court that they think the tape should have been sent to jail and the case had highlighted the “breakdown of our justice system”.
“How can this be correct? If the killers are considered as patients, how is the public safe?
“What is preventive for violent men if they do not see any real results of killing women?”
Ms. Westcar said that the family would immediately review the punishment on the basis of “unfair generosity”.
Earlier, Judge Nuberi mentioned the statements of the victim effects.
He said: “That daughter – her daughter and your daughter – motherless have been left and what you had done, not only at that time, but with her whole life – her father killed her mother.
“The family is, I learned, and this is clear, shattered and broken.”
Linda Westcar, the mother of Ms. Westcar-Sabarocha, had earlier told the court that her daughter was “taken brutally by someone she had trusted”.
She said that her granddaughter “still asks for her mother … She asks the question that any child should never ask”.
“It was just a life lost, it was a family shattered,” said Ms. Westcar.