Killer who escaped London mental health unit found after four-day manhunt

Philip Theophilou (left) stabbed Simon Breed to death in 2004
Philip Theophilou (left) stabbed Simon Breed to death in 2004 - PA

A convicted killer who went on the run from an east London mental health facility has been found after a four-day manhunt.

Philip Theophilou, 54, absconded from the building in Homerton on Sunday and reappeared at a hospital in south London in the early hours of Thursday morning, the Metropolitan Police has confirmed.

Theophilou, who stabbed his neighbour to death in 2004, was detained and taken back to the John Howard Centre.

The Met had warned the public not to approach him, fearing that he might pose a danger because he was without his medication.

The East London NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the medium-secure John Howard Centre, confirmed that Theophilou “has now been returned”. NHS England says medium-secure units “care for and treat patients who are a serious risk to others”.

An information guide produced by NHS England reads: “These patients need physical security to prevent them from escaping.” It adds that the facilities “focus on helping patients get better and keeping others safe”.

A CCTV picture issued by police shows Philip Theophilou before he went missing on Sunday
A CCTV picture issued by police shows Philip Theophilou before he went missing on Sunday - UNPIXS

Theophilou admitted to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility at the Old Bailey in 2005 after stabbing Simon Breed, 51, six times with a kitchen knife.

Theophilou, who was not taking his schizophrenia medication at the time, had been lying in wait outside the father-of-two’s home in Alexandra Park, north London.

In January 2003, he had caused thousands of pounds worth of damage to Mr Breed’s house and car with a meat cleaver.

The attack followed building work started by Mr Breed shortly after he moved in 2002, which had caused a crack in the house next door, which Theophilou shared with his parents, the Old Bailey heard.

He was sectioned under the Mental Health Act but then released from St Ann’s Hospital in north London in August 2003.

There were no problems until eight months later, in April 2004, when Mr Breed was attacked and killed at night as he returned from playing at a folk club.

Theophilou was sent to Broadmoor Hospital without limit of time under the Mental Health Act.

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