A
murderer is starting a life sentence after he repeatedly stabbed
another resident at their supported living hostel in south London.
Steven
Thwaites, 62, of Marmora Road, East Dulwich, must serve a minimum of
twenty years for killing 60 year-old Vincent Douglas.
Blackfriars
Crown Court heard Thwaites picked up a kitchen knife in the early
hours of December 1, last year and stabbed the victim in the abdomen,
liver, face and hands.
Police
were called at 2.32am following reports of a male suffering from stab
injuries.
Officers
attended and discovered Vincent in the garden of the address.
They
immediately began to administer first aid prior to the arrival of
colleagues from the London Ambulance Service.
Despite
subsequent efforts from paramedics, Vincent was pronounced dead at
the scene and a crime scene was established.
As
officers spoke to residents at the scene, Thwaites claimed Vincent
had inflicted the wounds himself.
However,
he gave differing accounts of where he had seen him, first claiming
he had been on the ground floor but later stating Vincent had been on
the top floor.
Thwaites
then claimed he had taken the knife Vincent allegedly used to inflict
his injuries and washed it before placing it in a drawer in his
kitchen.
CCTV
enquiries subsequently showed Vincent going downstairs from his room
with a head injury; he was then captured with a stab wound to his
abdomen visible before he went outside the building, pursued by
Thwaites who was armed with a knife.
Thwaites
required hospital treatment for laceration injuries to his hands that
he claimed were as a result of taking the knife from Vincent.
He
was arrested on suspicion of murder upon discharge from hospital.
During
interviews he again gave differing accounts to police of what had
happened.
He
was later charged with murder.
Detective
Inspector Will Reynolds, of the Homicide and Major Crime Command,
said: "This
was a very sad and unnecessary death.
“Both
men were vulnerable adults, living in supported accommodation and
without any history of conflict.
"Vincent
Douglas posed no threat at all to Thwaites, as evidenced by the CCTV,
played to the court.
“For
reasons, still not understood today, Thwaites stabbed Vincent Douglas
a number of times with a knife taken from the kitchen.
"On
his arrest he gave a number of confused and conflicting accounts for
how Vincent received his injuries and when interviewed tried
unsuccessfully to suggest that Vincent stabbed himself whilst trying
to take his own life.
“Vincent
had no history whatsoever of self-harm and the jury rightly convicted
Thwaites of murder.
"Vincent's
family are deeply upset by his death and are still coming to terms
with how he could have been taken from them in this way, so
unexpectedly.
“I
hope this verdict goes some small way to helping them come to terms
with their loss."
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