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Man guilty of 'hate crime' campaign

Posted: 17 June 2004 | Subscribe Online


A man who subjected social workers, health professionals and councillors to a seven-year campaign of hate crimes because he believed they were desperate to section him will be sentenced next month.

Richard Jan, 37, branded health professionals a "fascist horde" after they were called in to investigate his mental health after a fight at his parents' home in 1996.

He was found guilty last week of one charge of causing a nuisance to the public and two of arson with intent to endanger life.
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During the seven-year campaign in Ealing, London, he made 4,500 crank phone calls, sent 211 threatening letters, slashed car tyres and firebombed a councillor's home.

Social worker Shauna Bailey was attacked twice by Jan and has not worked since.

Earlier attempts to section Jan under mental health legislation failed because his condition was deemed untreatable.

At the Old Bailey, Judge Henry Blacksell QC said Jan was "mentally unstable", but added: "The absence of a medical recommendation allowing me to detain you indefinitely under the Mental Health Act will mean inevitable life imprisonment."
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Speaking outside court, Det Chief Inspector David Poole said: "It is fair to say he is undoubtedly Britain's worst stalker. He is a very dangerous individual whose seven-year campaign has ruined lives."

A nurse who worked at West London Mental Health Trust, where Jan was a client, said his campaign had resulted in staff being instructed to leave work together each day for their own safety.


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