Hospital order for man who stalked Myleene Klass

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Myleene Klass was sent items by Peter Windsor over a number of years

A man convicted of stalking TV and radio presenter Myleene Klass after posting her items including an air pistol and handcuffs has been made subject of a hospital order.

Peter Windsor, 61, from Birmingham, was at trial found guilty of two counts of stalking causing "serious alarm or distress" in relation to Ms Klass and fellow Classic FM presenter Katie Breathwick between 2020 and 2024.

The trial heard Windsor sent the women numerous unwanted gifts at Classic FM's central London studios, including details of how to write a will, binoculars, a police uniform and dozens of letters.

Some of the items were addressed to Ms Klass alone, some to Ms Breathwick alone, and some to both.

Windsor, who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, had denied the charges but was found guilty by unanimous verdicts following a trial in October last year.

During sentencing at Warwick Crown Court on Thursday, the judge said that while Windsor had no previous convictions, he believed the defendant knew what he was doing.

He pointed to an "escalating pattern of conduct" and "deliberate and calculating" actions, causing the women to make "significant changes" to their lifestyles.

Windsor, of Mary Road in the Stechford area of Birmingham, has been in custody since 18 September 2024 and will remain there before being transferred to a hospital within 28 days.

He will remain in hospital until a tribunal judge says it is safe for him to be released. He may then have to undergo further community treatment.

A restraining order was also imposed by the judge to protect the victims.

Windsor's trial heard he had been arrested but not prosecuted after sending a letter to then Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon in October 2020.

During the trial, both women became upset while giving evidence about the effect the sustained campaign of unwanted contact had on them.

The court was told the Royal Mail had discovered an air pistol addressed to Ms Klass among the items.

Jurors deliberated for four hours and eight minutes across a two-day period before returning their guilty verdicts.

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