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By DAVID ST GEORGE
 
Serial killer's 'chilling lack of remorse'

Patient re-enacted knife attacks

A FOUR-TIMES killer branded the most dangerous ever to be held at Broadmoor maximum security hospital showed no regret for his actions, a jury heard this week.
Daniel Gonzalez, 25, was detained in a special ward at the hospital after stabbing six victims in three days, the Old Bailey was told.
Even highly-feared fellow patients were terrified by the matter-of-fact way he re-enacted his knife attacks, including one in which he claimed the lives of a popular Highgate couple. He tried to bleed himself to death by chewing veins and arteries in his limbs, and even attacked his long-suffering mother and grand mother by tearing at their hair during a visit, Broadmoor consultant forensic psychiatrist Dr Edward Petch said.
The two-week trial moves into its closing stages today (Thursday) when judge Ann Goddard, QC, is expected to conclude her summing-up.
She will then ask the jury to retire to consider verdicts on four counts of murder and two of attempted murder.
Jobless Gonzalez, of Woking, Surrey, a drug addict and heavy drinker, admits all the attacks but claims diminished responsibility.
He said he was guided by “voices in my head”.
The prosecution claim he is now feigning mental illness to avoid prison.
Psychiatrist Dr Ian Cummings said that when Gonzales was first arrested and taken to prison from Holborn police station – where he attacked officers – he showed symptoms of being “bewildered and distracted”.
He slit the throat of a 73-year-old woman in West Sussex on September 15, 2004, and two days later repeatedly stabbed former Camden publican Kevin Molloy, 46, in Tottenham High Road.
Not long after he left Mr Molloy dead on the pavement he barged through the front door of a house in Makepeace Avenue, Highgate.
Retired paediatrician Dr Derek Robinson, 76, and his wife Jean, 68, a former music teacher. were both stabbed to death in their hallway.
He said: “I had no idea who they were. It was just the first place I went to. I wanted to see how many I could do before I got caught.”
Psychiatrist Dr Philip Joseph told the jury that the most striking feature of his conversations with Gonzalez was “his quite chilling lack of remorse.”
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