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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Khan v Parole Board [2015] EWHC 2528 (Admin) (15 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/2528.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2528 (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 :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Between:
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KHAN | Claimant | |
v | ||
PAROLE BOARD | Defendant |
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The Defendant did not attend and was not represented
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"In relation to cases concerning post-tariff indeterminate sentence prisoners, it has been said more than once that the board should scrutinise ever more anxiously whether the level of risk is unacceptable, the longer the time the prisoner has spent in prison following the expiry of his tariff."
The Board might also add to their anxious scrutiny consideration of the length of the original minimum term when compared with the time actually served, particularly where that minimum term was so short that the offender may not have been sentenced to an indeterminate sentence after the changes made by the CJIA 2008.
"After considering all the evidence and the submissions made on your behalf the panel is satisfied that notwithstanding your good behaviour over the past few months your risk has not reduced to a level that could be safely managed in the community and in consequence the panel does no direct your release.
The panel considered whether you should now be returned to open conditions. The purpose of spending time in open conditions is to provide an opportunity for any areas of on-going concern to be tested in conditions more closely resembling those to be found in the community; to allow you the opportunity to take more responsibility for your actions and to develop or advance your release plan. The panel is satisfied that you have not yet addressed the risk factors that contributed to your failure in open conditions and that it would be premature to recommend your return to open conditions. In consequence the panel advises the Secretary of State that you are not suitable for open conditions and does not make a recommendation for transfer to open conditions."
1 A period in open conditions is essential for most life sentence prisoners (lifers). It allows the testing of areas of concern in conditions that more closely resemble those that the prisoner will encounter in the community often after having spent many years in closed prisons. Lifers have the opportunity to take resettlement leave from open prisons and, more generally, open conditions require then to take more responsibility for their actions.
2. The main facilities, intervention and resources for addressing and reducing core risk factors exist principally in the closed lifer estate. In this context, the focus in open conditions is to test the efficacy of such core risk reduction work and to address, where possible, any residual aspects of risk.
3. A move to open conditions should be based on a balanced assessment of risk and benefits. However, the Parole Boards emphasis should be on the risk reduction aspect and, in particular, on the need for the lifer to have made significant progress in changing his/her attitudes and tackling behavioural problems in closed conditions, without which a move to open conditions will not be considered.
Ground 1 - the decision was unlawful in that it failed to give proper, sufficient and intelligible reasons.
"I acknowledge of course that it is not incumbent upon the Board to set out its thought processes in detail or to mention every factor they have taken into account. However, in my judgement the balancing exercise they are required to carry out is so fundamental to the decision making process that they should make it plain that this has been done and to state broadly which factors they have taken into account"
Ground 2 - the decision was irrational in that it gave too much weight to unproven and unsubstantiated allegations of bad behaviour against the claimant
"What undoubtedly is necessary, is that the justice, when forming his opinion, takes proper account of the quality of the material upon which he is asked to adjudicate. This material is likely to range from mere assertion at the one end of the spectrum, which is unlikely to have any probative effect, to documentary proof at the other end of the spectrum."
"That passage seems to me to be generally applicable to proceedings before the Parole Board when it is assessing risks, especially bearing in mind that recall decisions are not criminal proceedings within the meaning of Article 6. Merely because some factual matter is in dispute does not render hearsay evidence about it in principle inadmissible or prevent the Parole Board taking such evidence into account. It should normally be sufficient for the board to bear in mind that the evidence is hearsay and to reflect that factor in the weight which is attached to it."
(a) the decision of the Parole Board dated 4 December 2013 be quashed;
(b) the matter is remitted to a fresh panel for a re-hearing; and
(c) in view of the age of this matter and the length of time the claimant has been in prison since the minimum term expired, that re-hearing is to take place within 6 weeks of this order.