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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Osborne, R (on the application of) v HM Prison Littlehey [2010] EWHC 1277 (Admin) (26 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/1277.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1277 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT SITTING AT LEEDS
The Court House 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 ANDREW OSBORNE |
Claimant |
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and |
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THE GOVERNOR OF HER MAJESTY'S PRISON LITTLEHEY |
Defendant |
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Mr Philip Kramer (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the defendant
Hearing date: 11 May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Langan QC:
Introduction
Narrative
"I have viewed all the documentation and have considered this thoroughly. You are in denial of the index offence for which you were convicted and have outstanding work on your sentence plan, and therefore you have not significantly reduced your risk of re-offending and that risk remains high, therefore at this time you should remain a Cat C prisoner. To reduce your risk you need to complete your sentence plan targets which include SOTP and victim awareness."
"Mr Osborne attended the board to give his personal representations, also available were the representations from Mr Osborne's solicitors (Chivers) and his offender supervisor Miss Bush. Mr Osborne complies with the establishment regime in terms of work. He has had no adjudications against him and his behaviour is of a good standard. He has completed numerous educational courses passing a number of exams which will assist him in his reintegration into the community, however he has not completed any offence related work of which there is sex offender treatment programme and victim awareness still outstanding on his sentence plan.
His OASYs states he apportions the blame on his victims and is not able to understand other people's views, his risk to children remains high. When asked if he felt he had reduced his risk sufficiently to warrant Cat D he stated that he felt that he had in some ways, with the educational work and that he had been on bail and shown that he can accept and work to licence conditions, he also stated that he realised that to reduce the risk further he would need to complete courses including SOTP but as he is maintaining his innocence he is not able to do them, but would consider a community course if it was as a third party person and not actually as a guilty person.
Having taken into account all the information from his wing history, F2050, solicitors' representations and the discussion during the board I have assessed that even though his behaviour is good and he has completed educational courses there is still a significant outstanding risk to children which outweighs the reduction from his good behaviour and educational progress and he should therefore remain a Cat C prisoner."
"Mr Osborne has outstanding behaviour work to complete with regards to the sex offender treatment programme and victim awareness, both of which can be completed at Littlehey. He has to his credit completed a number of educational courses which should help with resettlement and his behaviour and compliance with the establishment regime is good, however as no offence related work has been completed and his current OASYs identifies him as a high risk to children his risk of re-offending has not been significantly reduced and therefore he should remain a Cat C prisoner."
"Mr Osborne, although you conform to the establishment regime, you have had no adjudications and your behaviour is good, you have not completed the outstanding offending behaviour work identified in your sentence plan and your risk remains high therefore at this time you should remain a Cat C prisoner. If you wish to progress to Cat D conditions you must understand that there must be clear evidence that you have reduced your risk of re-offending rather than just using your time constructively."
Discussion
"By the time a prisoner is eligible for review, staff will know much more about him than when he was first categorised by OCA staff at the local prison. However, while his circumstances may have changed, the matters which are relevant to a recategorisation are the same as those for an initial categorisation. The aim of recategorisation is to use this information to establish whether there has been any clear change in the risk the prisoner poses. More specifically, staff must answer two important questions: (1), is the prisoner more or less of a risk to the public than when he was first categorised, and (2), is he now more or less likely to escape or abscond. It is not necessary to prove continued or increased risk in both areas to retain the prisoner in his present category or upgrade him. There will be prisoners who pose less risk of escape than they once did, but who present such a serious threat to public safety that we cannot accept even the smallest chance that they will abscond or escape."
Then by paragraph 2.1.2:
"Having balanced the risk of the prisoner escaping or absconding against the likely risk to the public were he to do so, governors (or equivalent grades in contracted out establishments) must decide, provisionally, whether the prisoner should remain in his current category or downgraded. Where the provisional decision is to retain the current category or to downgrade it the governor must consider whether any control factors point to a different categorisation."
"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.
Recategorisation must be based on:
Evidence of a clear change in the level of risk posed by the prisoner in terms of escape or abscond and/or the risk to the public in the event of an escape or abscond.
New or additional information, which impacts on the original categorisation decision.
Concern that the previous recategorisation decision is unsound. There must be corroborative evidence to support this view.
Control issues
Paragraph 8.2 states that in reviewing a prisoner's category, "it is essential to look at the reasons why at his or her last review the prisoner was placed in the current security category." It is only then that it is possible to determine whether circumstances have changed so as to warrant a change in category.
"Good, compliant behaviour does not, in itself, indicate that the prisoner poses less risk either of escape or abscond or risk of harm to the public or risk to the good order of the prison and is not sufficient justification to downgrade a prisoner. There must be additional sound evidence that the prisoner's good behaviour is representative of a change in attitude and an associated reduction in the risks that were evidenced at the last categorisation review.
Disposal