Travelodge changes policy after attacker given room key

Travelodge changes policy after attacker given room key

3 hours ago

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Ros Tappendenand

Alex Meakin,South of England

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Thames Valley Police

Kyran Smith was given the key card after lying to staff

The Travelodge hotel chain says it has made “immediate changes” to its door key policy after a hotel guest was sexually assaulted by a man who was given the key card to her room.

Kyran Smith was jailed in February for seven-and-a-half years following the attack at a Travelodge in Maidenhead, Berkshire, in December 2022.

The chain’s chief executive Jo Boydell apologised to the victim in a statement on Sunday and said the changes would ensure additional or replacement keys were only issued with permission from the person staying in the room.

“We got things wrong and we should have acted sooner and I am truly sorry for that,” she said.

Prior to Boydell’s statement, the victim, who wishes to stay anonymous, told the BBC that Travelodge had “ample opportunity to deal with the case better” but “took a very long time to reply to me and didn’t really take it very seriously”.

“It was escalated in their company a little bit… but they still didn’t take the right precautions to deal with the situation,” she said.

Travelodge initially offered the victim a £30 refund, which she described as “insulting”, before the company issued an apology.

The victim said: “You need to then think, OK, that’s not what should have happened, what can we do better to make sure that doesn’t happen again?”

Travelodge said it had made changes to its key policy following the attack

Boydell said on Sunday: "I would like to express again how deeply sorry I am for what happened to the victim and for the mistakes we made in handling this.

"We got things wrong and we should have acted sooner, and I am truly sorry for that.

"I would welcome the opportunity to meet the victim to discuss what happened and to learn from our mistakes.

"We have done an internal review of our room access security policies and have made some immediate changes to ensure that an additional or replacement room key is only issued with explicit permission from the person, or people, staying in the room.

“This has been rolled out to all of our hotels, supported by training for our 12,000 customer-facing colleagues.”

The CEO said the safety of guests and colleagues was the “most important thing” and the company had commissioned an independent review of its room security measures.

Smith, from Staines, Surrey, had been at the same party as the woman during a night out in December 2022 when they and others retired to their rooms.

He went to reception in the early hours and was given the key card after lying to staff that he was her boyfriend.

The woman claimed staff told her Smith, who was known to her, had passed their security checks by providing her name.

Getty

Travelodge chief executive Jo Boydell (pictured in 2023) has requested a meeting with the safeguarding minister

Speaking before the security changes were announced, she told the BBC: "I think it doesn’t overly matter what someone knows about someone else, like personal details.

"It wouldn’t be OK for you to issue a key to my room without my consent.

“If hotels aren’t doing that, they need to contact the person before they give a key away.”

The woman said her room did not have a chain across the door.

“Maybe that should be mandatory in all hotels, so that you remove a little bit more of the risk,” she said.

“One of my biggest concerns, and from looking at everything online, is how many people do get access to people’s rooms.”

Labour MPs Matt Bishop and Jen Craft are due to meet with Boydell later to discuss security at the hotel chain.

Commenting on the upcoming meeting, the woman said it was good the issue was being highlighted, adding: "There needs to be better procedures for the issuing of keys, for giving out anything to do with rooms, really.

“It’s frustrating that it takes something like this to then push those kind of things forward but I’m glad that they’re actually looking at it.”

The company, based in Thame in Oxfordshire, said Boydell had also requested a meeting with the safeguarding minister.

More on this story

Travelodge boss to meet MPs over hotel sex attack

Travelodge boss offers to meet sexual assault victim

Travelodge staff gave attacker key to woman’s room

MPs demand Travelodge meeting over room security

Man who assaulted woman after party jailed

Berkshire

Thame

Travelodge

Maidenhead

Staines-upon-Thames

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