A huge blaze has erupted at a psychiatric hospital where some of Britain’s worst criminals have been held.
Broadmoor Hospital in Crownthorne, is currently up in flames sending plumes of thick black smoke into the sky.
Broadmoor is a high-security male only psychiatric hospital with a history of holding some of the country’s most notorious criminals, including Ronnie Kray, the Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, Charles Bronson and Robert Maudsley.
A Thames Valley Police spokesperson said they are attending the scene and assisting with road closures. They said that the blaze is restricted to the hospital site.
They added: ‘At this stage there is no impact to the wider road network.’
Today, Broadmoor holds the man who tried to kidnap Princess Anne in 1974, Ian Ball, and one of Lee Rigby’s killers, Michael Adebowale.
Ian Ball has been in Broadmoor ever since the incident in 1974, when he tried to kidnap the late Queen’s sister for a £2million ransom just yards from Buckingham Palace. When Ball tried to make Princess Anne get out of the car she was in she famously replied: ‘Not bloody likely.’
In 2019, one of Lee Rigby’s terrorist killers Michael Adebowale admitted to punching a healthcare assistant at Broadmoor whilst serving a 45-year term for the slaughter that shocked the nation in 2013. He was served a further eight months in jail to be added to the end of his sentence.
Located in Crowthorne, Berkshire, Broadmoor Hospital has housed dozens of sadistic killers since it opened its doors in 1863, including Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, gangster Ronnie Kray and rapist Robert Napper.
The institution for the criminally insane was built after the creation of the Criminal Lunatics Act 1860, also called the Broadmoor Act.
When the criminal lunatic asylum was opened it was for women only and held 95 female patients, with a block for male patients being added a year later. Now, it is a men’s only institution.
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The asylum was established for the ‘safe custody and treatment’ of severely mentally ill criminals.
When it first opened its doors in the Victorian age, there were no drugs or psychological treatments like what we are familiar with today. Instead, patients enjoyed a regime of rest and occupational therapy.
A few years ago, Broadmoor staff revealed what it’s really like to work at the high-security psychiatric hospital treating the criminally insane in Channel 5 documentary Broadmoor: Serial Killers & High Security.
From a patient torturing and killing another inmate to stopping obsessive ‘fans’ visiting high profile murderers with their children mental health professionals opened up about their harrowing experiences.
Professor Pamela Taylor, who worked as head of medical services at the institution, revealed how women would get solicitors to fight for their right to visit sex offenders with their own children in tow, and sent so many love letters to Sutcliffe that he couldn’t answer them all.
Another staff member who featured on the show Dr Jackie Craissati MBE, admitted reading about the crimes committed by the patients she treated left her ‘overwhelmed’ and feeling ‘waves of fear’.
According to the NHS Broadmoor is a specialist psychiatric hospital which provides assessment, treatment and care in high security conditions for men aged 18 and above from London and the South of England.
It’s one of three high-security psychiatric hospitals in England and Wales and treats people with severe mental illness and personality disorders who are at high risk of harming themselves or others.
The NHS says that Broadmoor is ‘internationally renowned for its highly specialised care and research work’.
It is part of the West London NHS Trust which has been authorised by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care to provide high secure men’s services. It’s currently rated as ‘Good’ by the Care Quality Commission.
William Turner is a seasoned U.K. correspondent with a deep understanding of domestic affairs. With a passion for British politics and culture, he provides insightful analysis and comprehensive coverage of events within the United Kingdom.