FINAL VERDICT: Myleene Klass’s stalker found guilty after chilling act with air 𝘨𝘶𝘯

A 61-year-old man has been found guilty of stalking Loose Women star Myleene Klass by posting to her an air pistol, handcuffs, a police uniform and “disturbing” unwanted letters. Jurors also convicted Peter Windsor of stalking Klass’s Classic FM colleague Katie Breathwick by sending her details of a DIY will-writing kit and other “raving” and “unhinged” mail.
Klass told Birmingham Crown Court last week how she felt “sheer terror” after being sent items by Windsor, who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and claimed to be not guilty by reason of insanity. Windsor, of Mary Road, Stechford, Birmingham, had denied stalking both Klass and Breathwick by sending items to Classic FM’s central London studios between March 2020 and August 2024.
Jurors reached their unanimous guilty verdicts on Tuesday after deliberating for four hours and eight minutes over two days. Windsor, wearing a grey sweatshirt, sighed and pursed his lips in the dock as the verdicts were announced.
Judge Tom Rochford told Windsor, who has been on remand throughout his trial, that the options for his sentencing next month include prison or two types of hospital order.
In her evidence to the court, Breathwick told jurors she was left terrified by Windsor, who also sent her numerous hand-written notes, binoculars, perfume and running shoes.
She told the trial that she informed Klass of around 100 notes and gifts because she felt her colleague needed to be aware of a situation that might put her at risk.

Windsor sent a note calling Klass a “naughty vixen”, and mailed Breathwick a letter saying he wanted to go paddling in a lake with both women while drinking champagne, the court heard.
It emerged during the trial that Windsor was arrested but not prosecuted after sending a letter in October 2020 to then-Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon which he said had been “signed in blood” and which “pledged his soul to Satan”.
He told jurors the letter was “just a joke” and that he had sent parcels and letter to the radio presenters as a “pretend weird” acting performance.
Both complainants became upset during the evidence, with Klass telling the court how Royal Mail had found an air pistol addressed to her.
The 47-year-old former Hear’Say singer said “it just felt extreme on every front” after she was informed in August last year by her employer’s security staff about packages sent by Windsor.
Invited to describe her feelings when she was informed by a police constable in September last year that an air 𝘨𝘶𝘯 had been intercepted, Ms Klass told the court: “He said to me that whilst the 𝘨𝘶𝘯 wasn’t necessary for a licence in this country, at such close proximity right up to 6ft it could prove fatal and police took it very seriously. I was extremely shocked because suddenly it felt extremely real. It’s a 𝘨𝘶𝘯 in a box with my name on it.”

Adjourning the case until sentencing at Warwick Crown Court, Judge Rochford said the offences had “clearly been a traumatic experience” for both complainants.
He told jurors: “You have heard that the defendant is a man of good character. I need to make arrangements for sentencing the defendant. The options that I have include a prison sentence but I also have options to impose a hospital order.”

He told the panel that convicted Windsor: “It’s been a slightly unusual trial from the lawyers’ point of view. Thank you for the care and attention you have given to this case.”
In his closing speech to the jury on Monday, defence barrister Philip Brunt said Windsor had been diagnosed for the past 30 years with paranoid schizophrenia and had included his name and address in the correspondence.
Windsor, who has used multiple names including Peter Szymanski and changed his surname to its current form by deed poll, had not followed anyone and was not told by anyone to stop sending letters, Mr Brunt added.
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