
BBC News, South
Family handoutThe mother of a hotel receptionist killed by a guest with a history of violence said her daughter’s death had left her feeling like she was “dying while still alive”.
Marta Elena Vento’s death at a Travelodge hotel in Bournemouth in December 2020 was caused by failures by prison health workers and police, a coroner concluded.
At their home in Valencia, Spain, the 27-year-old’s parents said “mistakes” were made by police, prison and health workers who dealt with killer Stephen Cole.
Cole, who had been actively psychotic when he killed Ms Elena Vento, was given an indefinite hospital order in 2021 after he pleaded guilty to manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility.

Concluding the inquest, Dorset Senior Coroner Rachael Griffin said Cole, who had recently been released from prison for sex offences, was not under proper supervision despite attacks on prison workers and inmates.
In a narrative conclusion, she said: “[He was] unmedicated because of a failure to sufficiently plan and ensure continuity of mental healthcare… and because he was not adequately managed as a sex offender in line with national guidance upon his release from prison.”
Ms Elena Vento’s parents, Roser Vento Sancho and Luis Elena Blas, invited the BBC into their home to talk about the failings they felt had led to their daughter’s death.
They showed me a very personal space – her bedroom.
The room is exactly as it was when she left home on her final adventure – a cork board displays photos with friends, ticket stubs and a map of Europe, marked with the cities she had travelled to.
Ms Vento Sancho makes sure there are always fresh flowers on her desk.
“I can’t let go of this,” she said.

Later, we drove to a beach which the family had visited many times. They scattered Marta’s ashes in the Mediterranean close to here.
Blowing kisses at the waves, she told me: “Marta is the sea now.”
The couple followed the inquest into their daughter’s death in Bournemouth remotely, hearing four weeks of evidence from authorities who dealt with Cole in the preceding months.
Mrs Vento Sancho, said: “[Cole] is the one who committed the crime, but the blame lies with the whole chain of people, from the prison, who should never have let him out, to the last person who saw him.
‘Incompetence and negligence’
“When you hear people talk… and you know they could have done better… then that breaks you down.
“It has been devastating, like dying while still alive.
“A part of my life has never been the same again. And it never will be.”
Her father likened Cole to a gun triggered by “incompetence, negligence and failure of duty”.
He said: “The mistakes are obvious… Stephen Cole is like the gun, but a gun doesn’t fire on its own. It needs intervention.
“And that intervention was… a failure of duty by all those who should have done their job before.”
Dorset PoliceThe 32-year-old killer, originally from Reading, had a diagnosis of psychosis and a history of violence, the inquest heard.
However, he was unmedicated and unsupervised when he launched a 42-minute assault on Ms Elena Vento in the early hours of 9 December.
Among those Mr Elena Blas blames is Dorset Police – Cole had been arrested for allegedly attacking guests and workers at another Bournemouth hotel five days before the Travelodge attack.
“You just pulled someone out of a fight, someone staying in a shelter only for problematic men, and you leave him on the street,” he said.
“That’s like dropping a bomb and not warning anyone.”
He also criticised prison authorities, which released Cole from HMP Winchester with a four-week supply of antipsychotic medication on 27 October 2020.
He added that a GP should have renewed the prescription at Cole’s request on 8 December – the day before the attack.

Coroner Ms Griffin said prison health services contractor PPG failed to discharge Cole to a GP or refer him to a community mental health team.
She also said Dorset Police did not gather sufficient information about him in order to manage the offender effectively.
However, she said the GP acted in line with local guidance in not prescribing antipsychotic medication and it was unclear what effect the drug would have had in a short time.
In her final words, the coroner spoke to Ms Elena Vento’s parents in Spanish.
The family’s translator told the court Ms Griffin said: “No-one in this room can imagine what you have suffered in almost four-and-a-half years since that terrible day.
“I regret from the depth of my heart for your loss.”
Ms Griffin said she would be sending a Prevention of Future Deaths Report to the NHS, police and prison authorities.
BBC News
