London – UK police said Wednesday a 26-year-old man was in custody after the wife and two daughters of a radio racing commentator were killed with a crossbow in a suspected “targeted” attack.
Kyle Clifford, 26, from Enfield in north London, was wanted in connection with the deaths of the three women in the town of Bushey, north of London, on Tuesday night.
The victims were Carol Hunt, the 61-year-old wife of BBC radio and Sky Sports racing commentator John Hunt, and their two daughters, Louise, 25, and Hannah, 28, the broadcasters said.
In a statement Wednesday, police said Clifford, who was found by officers in Enfield, “was known to the victims” and no additional suspects were being sought.
Clifford was “receiving medical treatment having been found with injuries,” police said.
John Hunt is BBC radio’s main horse racing commentator, having covered the world-famous Grand National and The Derby. He had just returned home on Tuesday evening from reporting at Lingfield Park racecourse, just south of London, when he found the bodies, according to British media.
Paramedics and police raced to save the victims, but they were pronounced dead at the scene, authorities said.
While police have not disclosed whether there was any relationship between the victims and Clifford, who is from London, the British media have described him as an ex-boyfriend of one of the daughters.
The BBC reported that Clifford briefly served in the British army in 2022. No other details were immediately available.
Laurence Brass, a local councilor who lives nearby, told the BBC that he was home watching football on television when a helicopter landed on the lawn outside.
Local police previously said officers were called to a house in the leafy commuter town where the three women were pronounced dead at the scene.
Chief Superintendent Jon Simpson called it “a horrific incident involving what is currently believed to be a crossbow, but other weapons may also have been used”.
A primary school in nearby Enfield kept children indoors during the police search.
There is no licence required to own a crossbow in the UK, but it is illegal to carry one in public without a reasonable excuse.
Interior minister Yvette Cooper called the deaths “truly shocking” and said she was being kept updated about the inquiry.
A spokeswoman for her department said legislation was “under constant review and a call for evidence was launched earlier this year to look at whether further controls on crossbows should be introduced”.
She said the minister would “swiftly consider the findings to see if laws need to be tightened further”.
– ‘Shocking’ –
BBC Radio Five Live sent a note to staff calling the incident “utterly devastating”.
Sky Sports Racing said on X that the team was “deeply saddened by the tragic deaths” and “our thoughts are with our colleague John Hunt, his family and friends at this awful time”.
One neighbour described hearing “shrill” screams from the home on Tuesday.
The 46-year-old who lives near the scene, said “absolute chaos” then broke out as armed police put the road into lockdown.
“We had armed police running down, screaming ‘stay in your house’,” she added.
Another neighbour told reporters the victims were a friendly family.
“We would see them every day passing by and they would say good morning,” she said. “It’s really sad what’s happened, very shocking.”
In March, a 47-year-old man was arrested after two people were injured in separate crossbow attacks in London’s Shoreditch area.
Last October Jaswant Singh Chail, 21, was jailed after being found in the grounds of Windsor Castle, west of London, with a loaded crossbow.
He broke into the royal residence on Christmas Day 2021 and told police he was trying to kill Queen Elizabeth II.
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