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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Firth, R (on the application of) v The Parole Board [2011] EWHC 211 (Admin) (11 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/211.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 211 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT SITTING AT LEEDS
1 Oxford Row, Leeds LS1 2BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of STEPHEN FIRTH |
Claimant |
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and |
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THE PAROLE BOARD |
Defendant |
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Mr David Manknell (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the defendant
Hearing date: 1 February 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Langan QC:
Introduction
Narrative
The impact on the victim was significant and had a long lasting emotional and psychological impact. Should [the claimant] commit another such offence the impact would be substantial. Although [he] has made real progress in terms of his thinking and behaviour and already gone some way to address the areas of crimogenic need outlined above, he still needs to be tested in the community. His risk will remain assessed as high until after a period of time where his behaviour has been tested without the restrictions of custody.
[The claimant] has progressed through the prison regime and is about to be moved into open conditions. He has completed all offence focused work available to him in the prison setting. Any further Accredited Programme work must now be completed in the community.
[He] will remain high risk due to the serious nature of the offence and the fact that he has not yet been tested in the community. It will also allow for the necessary risk management arrangements [to] be put in place, for example an Approved Premises placement.
My recommendation is therefore [that the claimant] is released and continues the positive work he has already achieved in custody.
The Panel takes account of the seriousness of the index offences and agrees that the risk would be exacerbated by a return to alcohol misuse, particularly if combined with feelings of low self esteem and sexual frustration, through a failed relationship or lack of a relationship, and remains that he remains a high risk of causing serious harm.
The panel expressed its conclusion in these terms:
In reaching its decision the Panel gives [the claimant] credit for his good behaviour in custody and for the progress he has made in beginning to address his offending behaviour. Both probation officers support release. The index offences were of the most serious nature with a long lasting serious impact on the victim. [The claimant] is assessed as presenting a high risk of causing serious harm, and there are areas of treatment which have yet to be addressed. Taking all these factors into account the Panel concludes that the risks remain too high to be safely manageable in the community and outweigh the benefit to [the claimant] of a longer period of supervision. Parole is denied. [The claimant] will have a further review.
Discussion
[I]n this case the claimant can present what is, at least, a fair argument to the effect that risk was accorded too much weight in the decision-making process. He may not succeed, but he has put forward a case which requires the grant of permission.
After hearing from Mr Stanbury and from Mr Manknell, counsel for the Board, I have, however, concluded that the decision must stand.
What is required of the Board is, in my judgment, no more than this: that it should convey to the prisoner who is not going to be released on licence the reason why it has concluded that it cannot direct release. Provided that the 'why' is clearly expressed, the chain of reasoning which led to the conclusion need not be set out.
The 'why' in this case was clearly expressed. The Board was telling the claimant: notwithstanding everything that has been said about your conduct in prison, the benefit which you could derive from work done on licence, and the absence of any further, useful work that could be done in custody, we regard the risk which you present as outweighing those factors. I do not agree that, in this case (in other cases the position might be different) even an elementary appraisal of the probation officers' views was required. The Board was not disagreeing with any fundamental point made by the officers about the claimant. What the Board was doing was taking into account the matters to which the officers had adverted, but finding that the scales tipped in the opposite direction to that recommended by the officers. The decision may have been, and probably was, finely-balanced. But how much weight should be attached to a particular factor, in this case the factor of risk, is a matter for prudential judgment rather than nice analysis. The question is simply not susceptible of more detailed explanation than that which is to be found in the decision.
Conclusion