Burglar stabbed in prison is 'loving life' as he wins £5.5m payout

by · Mail Online

A convicted burglar who won £5.5million in compensation after he was repeatedly stabbed by a fellow inmate in a prison kitchen has boasted on social media of 'loving life', while describing himself as 'a soldier still here to tell the story'.

Steven Wilson, 36, suffered multiple injuries including a torn liver, fractured spine and lacerated spinal cord when convicted murderer Patrick Chandler attacked him 'out of the blue' in July 2018 with a nine-inch knife as they worked in the prison kitchen at HMP Chelmsford.

He later sued, claiming the Ministry of Justice failed to adequately assess whether violent lifer Chandler was safe for kitchen work, given the opportunity to access knives and sharp items.

On Friday, Wilson's claim succeeded and he was handed a massive compensation payout of just under £5.5m at the High Court by Judge Melissa Clarke, who also ordered the government to pay his £546,000 lawyers' bill on top.

At the time of the attack, Wilson was on remand for a vicious aggravated burglary he was subsequently convicted for, in which he threatened and injured a homeowner with a sledgehammer and axe. 

Convicted burglar Steven Wilson, 36, who won £5.5million in compensation after he was repeatedly stabbed by a fellow inmate in a prison kitchen has boasted on social media of 'loving life', while describing himself as 'a soldier still here to tell the story'
Wilson (right) suffered multiple injuries including a torn liver, fractured spine and lacerated spinal cord when convicted murderer Patrick Chandler attacked him 'out of the blue' in July 2018 with a nine-inch knife as they worked in the prison kitchen at HMP Chelmsford
At the time of the attack, Wilson was on remand for a vicious aggravated burglary he was subsequently convicted for

Wilson and his two accomplices, Amadu Gbla, 35, and Angela Holland, 42, had broken into their victim's home in Clacton, Essex, between 4am and 6am on December 8, 2017, by throwing an object through his window.

Once inside, they threatened the terrified owner with a sledgehammer and an axe, demanded he hand over valuables and the PIN number for his card and hit him with the handle of an axe before driving off in his car.

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They left their victim covered in cuts and bruises and took the man's electrical and audio equipment, cash and a wallet.

Wilson was handed six-and-a-half years, Gbla was given six years and Holland was sentenced to four years after they were all found guilty of aggravated burglary and taking a motor vehicle without consent.

Just months after arriving at HMP Chelmsford, Wilson was attacked in the prison kitchen by Chandler, who was only 24 days into a life sentence for the brutal knife murder of John Comer, 45, in Lawford, Essex, in December 2017.

The formerly 'fit and fearless' Wilson recalled Chandler 'looking at him strangely' before he lashed out, as if he was 'looking straight through him'.

He was stabbed in the stomach with such force that it lifted him off the ground, but survived with a range of severe injuries and was left wheelchair bound.

Chandler later admitted attempting to murder Wilson and received an additional life sentence and ten-year minimum term in November 2018.  

'Loving life': The convicted burglar referred to his stabbing attack in a post earlier this year
Wilson described himself as a 'soldier' and said he 'feels like I'm 80' in a second social post

Social posts written by Wilson in the aftermath of that attack have now emerged in which he speaks about 'soldiering on'.

In a post written on 20 February 2023,he thanked his friends and family for their birthday wishes and said he felt 'like I'm 80'.

He said: 'Thanks for all the birthday wishes people much love...I'm 35 years YOUNG people remember that not years OLD lol....I loook like I'm  21 but I feel like I'm 80 years old but I'm soldering (sic) on like a SOLDIER I am lol.'

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A similar post was published a year later in which he again referred to himself as 'a soldier', adding he was 'still here to tell the story' despite being stabbed multiple times.

He wrote: 'Loving single life...no ties feel brand new getting old 36 today still look 21 but feeling old in this body...Disability hard people but I'm a soldier get stabbed 16 times still here to tell the story now that's what I call a f***ing soldier xxxx'

Six years after the attack, Wilson needs a walking stick to get around, is plagued by chronic pain and cannot work due to the legacy of his attack.

He also claims he has PTSD and a phobia of kitchens and knives.

The MoJ admitted liability for the attack and agreed that Wilson is due compensation, but had argued that, because he had a 20-year criminal record, with 'next to no history' of having earned an honest penny, he should not get the £5million-plus damages he was claiming. 

Chandler's overall risk rating had been assessed by the MoJ as 'medium', court documents disclosed, despite two weeks before the attack having allegedly told his supervisor that 'he had fantasized about violence and what he was going to do to people and about making weapons'.

Wilson suffered injuries including a torn liver, fractured spine and lacerated spinal cord when convicted murderer Patrick Chandler (above) attacked him 'out of the blue'

Wilson's barrister, Giles Mooney KC, told the judge that, once off the operating table, he was treated in hospital for over two months and had to use a wheelchair.

Giving evidence, Wilson told the judge: 'I went in there a perfectly fit young man and came out in a wheelchair.'

He said he is still haunted by the attack, has a deep horror of knives and now tries to avoid going into the kitchen at all times.

'When I see knives I feel cold,' he said from the witness box. 'You don't understand the chill I get when I see a knife.

One of Wilson's accomplices, Angela Holland, 42, who was sentenced to four years for aggravated burglary and taking a motor vehicle without consent

'I can't be in a kitchen or around knives because it reminds me of the attack.'

His ordeal also triggered flashbacks, PTSD and nightmares, he said, telling the court: 'When I came out I kept seeing this man.

'I knew that he was behind bars, but I kept seeing him, I had dreams that he was chasing me and I'd wake up in a pool of sweat.'

During the trial of the case, MoJ barrister Richard Wheeler KC told the judge: 'While the defendant accepts the claimant must be compensated for his injuries, that compensation must be fair, reasonable and just,' adding that Wilson had a lengthy criminal record, including offences involving criminal damage, theft, driving, breach of community orders and violence.

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Although he had at one point claimed to have earned £800-a-week prior to going to jail, he had put forward 'no evidence' of how he did this, said the barrister.

'The defendant submits the claimant's background is relevant to the assessment of damages and to the balance to be struck between achieving fair compensation for the claimant, whilst achieving an outcome which is not out of accord with what society would perceive as being reasonable, given the claimant's background and lifestyle before the assault.'

The MoJ argued that Wilson has made improvements in his condition since the attack and so does not need the level of care going forward that he claimed.

Mr Mooney however insisted that the MoJ had 'seriously undervalued' the claim and that he deserves the payout he claimed.

'It is entirely accepted that Mr Wilson had a somewhat troubled and criminal past prior to the attack on him,' he told the judge.

'However, the attack has left him with very serious injuries. He has extensive care, therapeutic and accommodation needs.'

Handing down judgment this morning, Judge Clarke said that some of the experts put forward by the Government Legal Department had during the trial 'departed from an initial fair and independent approach to Mr Wilson's case'.

Wilson was attacked 'out of the blue' in July 2018 with a nine-inch knife while they both worked in the kitchen at HMP Chelmsford

One expert was criticised for 'cherry picking' excerpts from video surveillance evidence, whilst another had 'lost sight of the fact that his first duty was to the court and was actively seeking to persuade the court to make a lower award,' the judge said.

'I have asked that there should be some introspection by the Government Legal Department on this and whether experts were asked to move away to more partisan and unfair analysis,' she said.

'I understand there has now been some such introspection by the Government Legal Department and I shall say no more about it.'

She went on to award a compensation payout of just under £5.5m, with Wilson's legal bill of £546,030.99 on top.

The judge ordered the government to pay £400,000 up front in regard to the legal costs bill.