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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Jonathan Humphries

Nurse in 'fight for life' as patient cornered him with flick knife

A mental health nurse found himself in a desperate fight for his life after being suddenly cornered, racially abused and stabbed by a patient with a flick-knife.

Victim Edward Inatimi suffered puncture wounds to his stomach in the attack, on April 18 last year, launched by 74-year-old Raymond Pearse who had a chronic and "treatment resistant" form of paranoid schizophrenia.

Liverpool Crown Court heard that Pearse had a history of serious violence and had spent much of his adult life in mental health institutions since being sectioned in 1975. The court heard before the incident, he had absconded from Heys Court, Garston, a unit run by Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust which houses older patients with severe mental health conditions.

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Sarah Griffin, prosecuting, said he was found in London and returned to the unit - but unknown to staff he had smuggled two knives and "sharp objects" back with him.

In a statement read in court, Mr Inatimi said: "I am still in shock and trying to process what has happened to me. The horror of having to fight for my life at work, where I should be safe, plagues me. I have been having flashbacks and night terrors about what happened.

"I have also suffered from nightmares where I was unable to disarm Pearse and he then proceeds to harm the other patients in my care or my colleagues who were working with me."

The court head that at around 8.10pm on the day of the attack, Mr Inatimi, who had been Pearse's designated nurse, saw the pensioner standing near to the ward office.

Ms Griffin said: "As he got closer to the defendant, the defendant turned around, took a knife out of his jacket and pointed it at Mr Inatimi. The defendant told him that he was going to stab him to death."

The court heard Mr Inatimi backed off but Pearse called him a racial slur and advanced, holding the knife "firmly" and jabbing it towards him. Ms Griffin said Mr Inatimi tried to calm Pearse down and pressed his personal alarm, but it failed to activate.

The court heard the nurse took the brave decision not to shout out for help to prevent other patients and staff being put at risk, and instead decided to just keep backing away.

Ms Griffin said: "Unfortunately, he got stuck between a table and a door frame. The defendant was getting closer and seemed angry. When the defendant realised Mr Inatimi was stuck he lunged toward him with the knife.

"Mr Inatimi instinctively grabbed the defendant’s upper arms to try to minimise any injury. Mr Inatimi struggled with the defendant to try to keep the knife away from him but he could feel the defendant pushing the knife hard towards him.

"Both men ended up on the floor before Ms Clarke and Ms Kyriakidis came over to where they were. Mr Inatimi managed to grab the knife that the defendant had dropped to the floor in the struggle and the defendant was escorted back to his room."

The court heard once Pearse was safely back in his room, Mr Inatimi realised he had blood running down his abdomen and seeping through his clothes from several puncture wounds. He was rushed to Aintree Hospital but did not require surgery.

Ms Griffin said a search was carried out on Pearse's room where a second knife and other "sharp objects" were discovered

The court heard the pensioner was ruled unfit to stand trial, but a jury at Liverpool Crown Court concluded he had committed the act of wounding Mr Inamiti after a fact finding hearing.

John Weate, defending Pearse, called on consultant psychiatrist Dr Martin Williams to give evidence at the hearing. Dr Williams said he was Pearse's treating clinician at his new home at the Gateway Recovery Centre secure hospital in Widnes.

Under questioning from Mr Weate, Dr Williams said Pearse suffered from delusional beliefs and occasional auditory hallucinations, and sometimes resisted or refused treatment.

He said: "Mr Pearse has a long history of aggressive acts which we can link to his mental disorder. This violence and aggression has at times incorporated the use of weapons. The description of his presentation on the day of the offence is indicative of a degree of malign intent, and those risks remain."

Dr Williams said he believed the right setting for Pearse was inside a secure hospital, such as the one he is currently living in, due to his risk of harm to the public.

Judge Judith Bond, passing sentence, referred to Pearse's history of violent incidents. She said he had been sectioned in 1975 after a serious assault, and in 1988 he was found in possession of a rifle and "flammable liquids". Judge Bond also described how in 1989 he "caused an explosion while trying to build a radio transmitter to speak to aliens".

The court heard that this year, while on leave from hospital, Pearse barged into an elderly woman in a shop and told his carers he had done it because she was "dawdling". He had also began to regularly shout racial abuse at staff and the prognosis for his condition improving was poor.

Judge Bond said she was satisfied that Pearse's chronic mental condition and aggressive behaviour meant that a hospital order with restrictions under Section 37(41) of the Mental Health Act was justified, meaning strict conditions must be met before Pearse can ever be released from hospital.

A spokesman for Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust said: “We regard all assaults against our staff as completely unacceptable. We continue to support our staff, who often work in difficult and challenging circumstances with patients and service users with complex mental health needs.

“The safety of our staff remains paramount and when incidents happen there are robust reporting procedures in place and our staff are supported. Mersey Care continues to review and learn from all incidents, understand any actions required and ensure our organisation learns from them. We also offer our staff a comprehensive Occupational Health and Health and Wellbeing service to extend our support to deal with the impact of the challenging issues they may encounter.

"Our Trust continues to work to tackle violence and abuse against our staff and has established a Violence Reduction Programme which aims to protect our workforce against deliberate violence and aggression from patients, service users, their families and the public, and to ensure offenders are reported to the police."

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