Care failings before woman dismembered in her home

· BBC News
June Fox-Roberts was described by her family as a "force of nature"Image source, Family photo

Jenny Johnson
BBC News
Nelli Bird
BBC News

Multiple failings have been identified in the case of a woman who was killed and dismembered in her own home.

Luke Deeley, 26, walked into June Fox-Roberts' home in Pontypridd, Rhondda Cynon Taf, and killed her in November 2021.

Family of Ms Fox-Roberts, 65, believe her death could have been avoided.

A safeguarding review concluded that opportunities had been missed and made a number of recommendations, while Cwm Taf Morgannwg health board apologised and accepted the recommendations.

WARNING: Contains upsetting content

Ms Fox-Roberts’ body was discovered on 21 November by her daughter Abi Sheppard and a family friend, who had become concerned after being unable to contact her.

Deeley, who had earlier been diagnosed with psychosis, had been living rough in Llantwit Fardre and Church Village, got into the house on St Anne’s Drive through an unlocked door in the early hours.

At his subsequent sentencing, the court was told he had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

Due to his illness the Crown accepted his plea of manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility.

It is thought Ms Fox-Roberts came downstairs and was attacked by Deeley in the hallway.

She suffered head injuries before being dragged into the dining room where she was placed on a tarpaulin, decapitated and dismembered using an axe.

Deeley, then 25 and an art student, was arrested two days later after being spotted on CCTV living rough at a nearby tyre depot.

He admitted manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility and was detained indefinitely at Ashworth psychiatric hospital in April 2023.

The report criticised agencies for not sharing information about Deeley having "strange thoughts about women" or that they found pictures of naked women tied up with ropes in his student bedroom.

It said, while no one could have predicted what would happen, "all of the information pointed to someone who was experiencing a significant and insidious deterioration in their mental state", and who was also expressing, "unusual beliefs about, and acts of aggression towards, women".

A single unified safeguarding review was carried out to assess the role of agencies involved in the case, including the health board, Rhondda Cynon Taf council, South Wales Police and the University of South Wales.

It found:

The report comes in the wake of a string of cases where the role of authorities in caring for people with serious mental illness who have gone on to kill has been criticised.

Cwm Taf Morgannwg health board was also criticised after the killing of 88-year-old John Rees in a Co-op store by Zara Radcliffe in May 2020.

An inquest in May 2024 found serious failures contributed to the death of Dr Kim Harrison, who was killed by his son.

Ms Fox-Roberts, a former IT consultant who loved baking and ran a cafe for a time, was described by her family as "a force of nature, passionate, vibrant, determined".

Her daughter Abi Sheppard said: "She was just an absolute beacon in my life, my absolute rock."

She said she was angry the system "has let us down".

"He had a history of violence and aggression. And if he’d been cared for properly and monitored, would it have happened? We don’t know, we’ll never know," she added.

"It’s not good enough that people are falling through the cracks. There are consequences to that – my mother is one of those consequences and it’s destroyed my world because he wasn’t cared for properly."

Ms Sheppard said that, while the report had answered some of the family's questions, others remained, including "why that house, why that street, why the way he did it, why he dismembered her?"

Timeline of events

In a statement, Deeley's parents said the health board "failed to provide the care and support needed by our son" and said, if it had, "this tragedy may have been prevented".

They added: "There have been too many mental health-related tragedies in this health board area.

"Due to a lack of accountability and failure to implement the lessons learned from previous reports, the same mistakes are needlessly being made time and time again."

They added: "We cannot imagine the devastation caused to the family of June Fox-Roberts and they are always in our thoughts."

Trisha Fox, June's daughter, said she felt "really angry" as her mother's case followed other, similar ones and there had not been changes made quickly enough.

"I feel it’s a total failure of the system he was supposed to be under the care of," she added.

"I think there’s something which needs to be looked at, immediately, not in two or five years’ time, not ‘we’ll take the appropriate steps as and when’ - it needs to be done now."

Ms Sheppard said the family hopes there will now be an inquest into her mother's death, "because we think that might provide us with more answers".

"We’re a family that’s been brought up by a strong, independent woman whose view was that you just keep swimming, and that’s what we do, but with this massive gaping hole in our hearts where we’re never able to catch our breath because there’s always something coming at us. It's exhausting."

Health board chief executive Paul Mears expressed his "deepest sympathies" to Ms Fox-Roberts' family and said the review recommendations reflected the findings of its own internal investigation.

"We apologise to both families for the instances in which Luke Deeley's care fell short of the high standards we expect for all of our service users," he added.

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