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By RICHARD OSLEY
 
Murderer's family made 100 help pleas

A MENTAL health charity has warned that cries for help from Daniel Gonzalez and his family were missed before he turned to violence.
The Surrey and Borders NHS Trust, which treated Gonzalez for seven years, insists the gruesome killings could not have been predicted.
But Rethink, a charity supporting Gonzalez’s mother, Lesley Savage, said that more than 100 pleas for support went unanswered. Cliff Prior, Rethink’s chief executive, said: “This tragic case highlights the need for mental health services from top to bottom to listen and act when families come to them for help. Currently, one in four people is turned away when seeking help.”
He added: “The victims and Daniel Gonzalez were not failed by mental health law – the present Mental Health Act makes it clear that pleas for help must be responded to – he was failed by individuals and services who did not implement the law properly.”
In a statement after the case, Ms Savage said: “Despite our incessant pleas to health services, social services and to the police, Daniel was often turned away, passed from one group of professionals to another and left without the support and help he so obviously and desperately needed.”
An inquiry – to be held behind closed doors – will probe the care Gonzalez received.
A Surrey and Borders Trust statement said: “These incidents were not preceded by a history of violence and for that reason the trust does not believe his actions could have been predicted.”
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