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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Mitchell, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWHC 1370 (Admin) (03 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1370.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1370 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF STEPHEN MITCHELL | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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Mr David Manknell (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"The panel recognises that risk factors regarding relationships with women remain to be further addressed and in some detail. This process may well require some time to fully accomplish, but the panel finds that the risk of further serious offending is sufficiently reduced to permit this work and subsequent assessments to be accomplished in open conditions. There will be the need for close monitoring and ongoing risk assessments."
"He considers a long period in open will enable you to build on your relapse prevention strategies, develop and test your release plan and enable you to build a relationship with the Probation Service, which will held you to be open about any future relationships. It will also allow time for assessment and completion of a healthy relationship programme."
"The fact that the Healthy Relationships Programme is not available in open conditions should not prevent your retransfer to open conditions until such time as it does become available. As the risk is sufficiently low to be managed in open conditions, the Panel consider that it might be a retrograde step not to re-transfer you there to enable you to continue to make your progress through the prison system, to learn how to manage greater freedom, to accept responsibilities and test your motivation and resolve to put into practice all the matters that you have been taught over the years, as well as those you have learnt from life's experiences."
The Parole Board accordingly made its recommendation for transfer to open conditions in the knowledge that he would be required to return to closed conditions again to undertake the necessary courses. In effect, what it advised was that he should meanwhile remain in open conditions for the reasons which it gave.
"It is the duty of the Board to advise the Secretary of State with respect to any matter referred to it by him which is to do with the early release or recall of prisoners."
It was not the duty of the Parole Board to make the categorisation decision. That was the duty of the Secretary of State.
"(1) The decision of the Secretary of State is not lawful if he fails to take into account the recommendation of the Parole Board and the fact that the Parole Board has particular expertise in assessing the risk posed by individual prisoners. Nevertheless, it is a matter for the Secretary of State what weight he assigns to those factors in any given case...
(5) Even if the procedure adopted by the Secretary of State is fair, if his final decision is irrational it may still be quashed on traditional Wednesbury grounds."
"The Parole Board states that it accepts that further work to be done on relationships and the intense emotions which may arise within them. The Secretary of State agrees with this view and further notes that you have been assessed as suitable for the Controlling Anger and Learning to Manage it (CALM) course. You have yet to complete both this work and the high intensity version of the Healthy Relationships Programme (HRP) for which you are considered suitable. The Secretary of State considers it to be essential that you complete these two courses or other offending behaviour work to address these risk factors to his satisfaction prior to further consideration being given to possible transfer back to open conditions. This is in order for the level of risk you pose regarding violence (particularly in relationships) to be reduced to an acceptable level for management in open conditions.
The Parole Board takes the view that the lack of this work should not prevent your return to open conditions. The Secretary of State disagrees. Both courses mentioned have been recommended because they are designed to address core risk factors surrounding your offending. Until these courses or similar work have been completed and your progress assessed, your risk factors cannot be considered to have been fully addressed. An open prison is a place to prepare for release and undertake resettlement activities. It is not an appropriate environment for someone to wait for such key courses to become available. With unaddressed risk factors it would be difficult for you to be addressed as suitable to take part in resettlement activities outside of the prison and therefore you would not be able to benefit from the opportunities available to those preparing for imminent release. The regimes in open prisons do not provide the resources for key offence-related work nor a sufficient level of security while those factors remain unaddressed and you would not be able to partake of the regime available in such prisons until the offence-related work had been completed. The risk of absconding may therefore be considered to be high. The Secretary of State has recently learned that you were offered the opportunity to transfer to another prison to commence the CALM course in September but you declined. The course is now filled and it will unfortunately be sometime before another place becomes available. However, prison staff will endeavour to find you a place as soon as possible as you need to complete this work prior to undertaking more specialised work on managing emotions within a relationship."
The letter went on to refer to the relationship with M and to Ms Booth's report, which formed part of the dossier before the Parole Board and the material considered by the Secretary of State in which she expressed the view that he was not suitable either for open conditions or for release because of her concerns about the relationship with M and what in her view amounted to his lack of frankness about it with her.
"First, there must have been a mistake as to an existing fact, including a mistake as to the availability of evidence on a particular matter. Secondly, the fact or evidence must have been 'established', in the sense that it was uncontentious and objectively verifiable. Thirdly, the appellant (or his advisers) must not have been responsible for the mistake. Fourthly, the mistake must have played a material (not necessarily decisive) part in the tribunal's reasoning."