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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Smith & Anor, R (on the application of) v HMP Lindholme [2010] EWHC 1356 (Admin) (11 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/1356.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1356 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT AT LEEDS
The Courthouse, 1, Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN (ON THE APPLICATION OF JOHN SMITH and JOHN MULLALLY) | Claimants | |
and | ||
THE GOVERNOR OF HMP LINDHOLME | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
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Mr Jason Elliott instructed by Chivers, Solicitors, for the Claimants
Mr John Z Hunter instructed by the Treasury Solicitor for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 04 June 2010
Hand down Judgment: 11 June 2010 at 10.00 am
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Roger Kaye QC:
Introduction and Issue
Evidence
The Facts – Mr Smith
"PSI 03/2009 states that prisoners who are automatically released at the halfway stage of their sentence should not normally proceed to open conditions until they are within two years of their release date. The Governor has adopted the criteria laid down in PSI 03/2009.
The countersigning Governor has reviewed your client's case and found that no exceptional circumstances exist to support a variance from the original decision."
"The defendant has realistically not opposed the grant of permission: there is clearly scope for debate as to the interface between the 'lowest category' principle in PSO 0900 and the two-year requirement in PSI 03/2009 in the particular circumstances of this case."
- "The length of your sentence and time left to serve. More than 2 years to serve and no demonstration of exceptional circumstances"
- "Security information."
- "Wing/work reports."
The Facts – Mr Mullally
"Prison Service Instruction 03/2009 Chapter 15.1 states that prisoners serving a sentence of 4 years or more who will be released at the halfway point of their sentence (conditional release date) must generally be within 2 years of CRD. Your CRD is 29/09/12 which is over 3 years away. The Governor will not sign up prisoners who are outside the criteria. The implementation date for PSI 03/09 was 25/5/09. I agree that other prisoners have gone to open conditions with longer than 2 yrs to serve but not since the implementation of PSI 03/09."
"In May 2009 a new Prison Service Instruction was published and applies to your re-categorisation review. The main impact of this PSI upon yourself is contained in paragraph 15.2:
Prisoners serving a standard determinate sentence are automatically released at the halfway point in their sentence (CRD) and must generally be within 2 years of CRD.
I have assessed your individual case and I am unable to support your re-categorisation due to the length of time you have left to serve. The overriding factors in this decision are the increased risk of abscond due to the length of time left to serve and the potential risk to public confidence if you were to be removed to open conditions at this point in your sentence." [The passage in italics and underlined is in italics in the original]
Summary of Reasons for Refusal
Name | Date | Reasons |
Smith | 16 June 2009 | Security aspects, more than 2 years to serve, no exceptional circumstances |
7 December 2009 | As before (food tampering, drugs) | |
Mullally | 29 June 2009 | More than 2 years to serve, no exceptional circumstances |
7 December 2009 | Security aspects, more than 2 years to serve, no exceptional circumstances (postal orders, obscuring views of staff, drugs) | |
20 May 2010 | More than 2 years to serve, no exceptional circumstances |
The Procedural History
The Regulatory Framework
- Para. 1.1.1 dealing with categorisation, lists category C and D prisoners as follows:
Category C: "Prisoners who cannot be trusted in open conditions, but who do not have the resources and will to make a determined escape attempt"
Category D: "Prisoners who can be reasonably trusted in open conditions"Para. 1.2 deals with categorisation: it provides that "prisoners must be categorised objectively according to the likelihood that they will seek to escape and the risk that they would pose should they do so"
- Para. 1.2.3 provides: "Every prisoner must be placed in the lowest security category consistent with the needs of security and control. A prisoner must be assigned to the correct security category even if it is clear that it will not be possible to allocate him to a particular establishment for prisoners in that category".
- Para. 3 provides: "The specific instruction on recategorisation to category D highlights the importance of weighing time left to serve in the assessment for category D and in particular the extent of any impact on public confidence should a long sentence prisoner abscond. Cases must be decided on their individual merits but to help those making the decisions the guidance is that prisoners should not normally spend any longer than 2 years in open prison before their expected release date."
- Para. 8.1: "The purpose of the recategorisation process is to determine whether, and to what extent, the risks a prisoner presented at his or her last review have changed and to ensure that the prisoner continues to be held in the most appropriate conditions of security."
- Para. 8.3: "It must be the aim that prisoners are held in the lowest possible security consistent with preventing escape or risk of harm to the public or to the security of the prison. However, for operational reasons, prisoners may be held in a prison of a higher security category, although the numbers of such prisoners must be limited by agreement between Regional Managers Custodial Services and PMU. On no account must a prisoner be allocated to a prison of a lower security category than the category assigned to the prisoner."
"14. RECATEGORISATION TO CATEGORY D.
14.1 It is essential that prisoners must be assessed as trustworthy and sufficiently low risk before being allocated to open conditions. In making the decision, governors must keep in mind the particularly challenging management issues associated with the low physical security and supervision levels of the open estate and that the environment and regime opportunities available in open prison may not be suitable for a prisoner who is still many years away from possible release.
14.2 In addition to the risk assessment issues listed above (under Process) it is important to bear in mind the damage to public confidence in the Criminal Justice System if a prisoner serving a lengthy sentence were to abscond, particularly if the prisoner had spent a very short period of time in closed conditions and/or still has many years left to serve.
14.3 The risks to be assessed may conflict. Likelihood of abscond and risk of harm to the public and damage to public confidence if an abscond occurs will not necessarily be the same, and long sentence prisoners who statistically present an average or lower likelihood of abscond may represent a disproportionately high risk of harm to the public should they abscond and/or a high risk of damage to public confidence in the Prison Service's ability to safeguard the public by keeping prisoners in safe custody.
14.4 When assessing long sentence prisoners for open conditions it is vital to balance the risks involved if the prisoner were to abscond against the likely benefits to the prisoner of going to open conditions at this stage. Governors will need to consider whether the prisoner has made sufficient positive and successful efforts to reduce risk levels and that the benefits he or she would gain from allocation to open prison are worthwhile at this particular stage in sentence. Consultation with the Police Intelligence Officer should be an integral part of the assessment of any long-term prisoner.
14.5 Every case must be considered on individual merit but, in general, long sentence prisoners should not be recategorised and allocated to open prison until they have served a sufficient proportion of their sentence in a closed prison to enable them to settle into their sentence and to access any offending behaviour programmes identified as essential to the risk reduction process.
14.6 In addition, prisoners should generally not be allocated to open prison :-
- with more than 2 years to serve before their earliest release date ; and
- in the case of prisoners subject to the release provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 to whom the new duty to release at the half-way point in section 33(1A) does not apply (i.e. 'unconverted' 1991 Act prisoners with a PED), they must also be within 5 years of non-parole date (NPD).
Where prisoners are more than 2 years away from earliest release date they must still have their categorisation reviewed in line with the normal process and consideration given to whether there are exceptional circumstances to justify allocation to open prison at this stage. There is no right to have 2 years in open conditions before possible release." [My emphasis]
"15. Timing
15.1 Prisoners who come under the release arrangements of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 as amended by the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008
• Prisoners serving a sentence of 4 years or more who will be released automatically at the half-way point of sentence (CRD) pursuant to section 33(1A) of the above Act must generally be within 2 years of CRD
• Prisoners serving a sentence of 4 years or more who won't fall to be released automatically at the half-way point of sentence must generally be within 2 years of Parole Eligibility Date (PED) and 5 years of their non- Parole Date (NPD)
15.2 Prisoners who come under the release arrangements of the Criminal Justice Act 2003
• Prisoners serving a standard determinate sentence are automatically released at the half way point in their sentence (CRD) and must generally be within 2 years of CRD
• Prisoners sentenced to an Extended Sentence for Public Protection (EPP) prior to 14 July 2008 may be released on the recommendation of the Parole Board at the halfway point of the custodial part of their sentence (PED), or at the end of the custodial part of their sentence (CRD) and must generally be within 2 years of PED.
• Prisoners sentenced to an EPP on or after 14 July 2008 (and whose offence was committed on or after 4 April 2005) will be automatically released on licence halfway through the custodial part of their sentence (CRD), rather than halfway release being at the Parole Board's discretion and must generally be within 2 years of CRD.
Where a prisoner is serving a mixture of 1991 Act and 2003 Act sentences totalling 4 years or more the timings above will apply to whichever is the later – CRD, PED or NPD where these are applicable."
The Claimants' Submissions
The Defendant's Submissions
Discussion
- Both prisoners were allowed to attend a Family Visitors' Day on 17 December 2009 which they could not have done had they not passed "strict criteria" and "shown a positive attitude to [their] sentence" (see above). There may be a perfectly reasonable explanation for what might be viewed as a potential inconsistency in risk assessment (I put it in the absence of evidence no higher than that) but none was provided.
- The recourse in Mr Mullally's case to reliance on both para. 15.1 and 15.2 of PSI 03/2009 seemed on the face of it both inexplicable and illogical. So far as I can tell they have nothing to do with re-categorisation (though in an appropriate case the question of timing of release might well be relevant as regards, say, allocation). Why they were relied on remains unclear save to add to the confusion.
- The re-sending to him of the same letter with a crude handwritten later date on it in response to his appeals in July and August 2009 (see above) struck me as unhelpful.
- In particular I asked Mr Hunter what examples of "exceptional circumstances" would permit a prisoner against whom nothing adverse is known beyond the period of his sentence left to expire which might permit him or her to be categorised in category D outside the two year period. I am not sure I obtained a compelling answer beyond it is a matter for the governor's discretion. I agree it is, but where, as I have the impression here, that discretion is abrogated in every case where the prisoner has more than two years to serve; it does indeed appear to be the adoption of an inflexible approach to a flexible policy as Mr Elliott submits.
- The security concerns that applied to Mr Smith and at one time to Mr Mullally may well have been or amounted to good reasons for not downgrading each prisoner's category. Aside from the reference to "drugs" they did not seem to me to amount to much and no details were forthcoming beyond that stated above.
- The forms as completed by the prison authorities are barely legible and do nothing to help the prisoner understand why his review or appeal has been rejected.
Conclusion