LONDON — British police said Friday that they have arrested a 26-year-old man on suspicion of killing two sisters and their mother in a crossbow attack.
In a statement Friday, Hertfordshire Police said that they arrested the suspect on Thursday evening. He remains in a serious condition in a hospital.
Police previously said that Kyle Clifford was captured on Wednesday in a cemetery near his home in Enfield, around 15 miles (24 kilometers) from the scene of the crimes, following a near day-long manhunt. Officers who found Clifford recovered a crossbow and took him away on a stretcher from Lavender Hill Cemetery with undisclosed injuries. Police said no shots had been fired.
The three women — the family of a well-known BBC radio commentator —- were found with serious injuries at their home in the quiet residential neighborhood of Bushey, northeast of the capital, on Tuesday evening. Police and ambulance crews tried to save Carol Hunt, 61, and her daughters Hannah, 28, and Louise, 25, but they were pronounced dead at the scene.
''Our thoughts remain with the victims' family at this tragic time,'' said Detective Superintendent Rob Hall, from the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Major Crime Unit.
The women were the wife and two of the three daughters of John Hunt, a well-known horse racing commentator for BBC 5 Live, the corporation's news and sports radio channel. His voice is known to millions through his coverage of the world famous Grand National and The Derby.
At a memorial service on Thursday at St. James' Church nearby, shocked friends and neighbors expressed their sympathies for John Hunt and his one remaining daughter. Others laid flowers near the scene of the attack, which remained cordoned off.
''We grew up together and were pregnant at the same time,'' said Lea Holloway, who had known Carol Hunt since she was 16. ''This is the stuff nightmares are made of ... I can't imagine what it would be like.''