A man who beat a 93-year-old widow to death at a care home has been locked up in hospital indefinitely.
Alexander Rawson, 63, used a crutch to attack “kind and caring” grandmother-of-five Eileen Dean in her bedroom at Fieldside in Catford, south London, on January 3.
Afterwards, Rawson phoned 999 in a state of distress and agitation, and said: “I think somebody’s been killed and I don’t know what’s happening.”
Mrs Dean, who had been self-isolating with Covid-19, suffered multiple fractures to facial bones and traumatic brain injury, and died in hospital.
The court heard how Rawson had moved into the bedroom next door to Mrs Dean in late December last year.
Previously, he had been detained under the Mental Health Act and been an in-patient at two south London hospitals since last July.
Rawson, who suffers a degenerative brain condition commonly associated with alcohol abuse, was found unfit to stand trial for murder.
Following a trial of the facts at the Old Bailey, he was found by a jury to have attacked and killed Mrs Dean.
On Monday, Mrs Dean’s daughter Georgina Hampshaw wept as she told the court she felt “let down” by social services and the care home.
Reading a victim impact statement, Mrs Hampshaw described her mother as a kind, cheerful and energetic lady who “never lost her sense of humour”.
In her prime, Mrs Dean had loved music halls, where she met her late husband Charlie, and her “party piece” was the Charleston dance, the court heard.
Following the attack, Mrs Hampshaw told the court the mother-of-three had been left almost unrecognisable.
Mrs Hampshaw struggled to understand how “such a wicked and callous crime had happened to her – especially committed in a care home where I thought she was safe and being cared for and protected”.
She added: “My mum’s life should never have ended this way.”
Judge Alexia Durran handed Rawson a hospital order without limit of time.
The judge said he posed an ongoing threat to the public, citing his threats of violence with a butter knife, scissors and walking stick.
Have you got a story for us? You can contact us here.
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to keep up with all the latest news.
Sign up to our newsletters to get updates sent straight to your inbox.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel