![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Browne, R (on the application of) v The Parole Board of England and Wales [2016] EWHC 2178 (Admin) (31 August 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/2178.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2178 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of ASWAD BROWNE) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
THE PAROLE BOARD OF ENGLAND AND WALES |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms Zoe Leventhal (instructed by GLD) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20 July 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ McKenna:
Introduction
"While the Court generally leave matters of judgement on release to the Parole Board, the claim is on balance arguable."
i) Failure to apply a presumption in favour of release;ii) Unfair assumptions against the Claimant made by the Defendant in the absence of a fair procedure for the determination of disputed matters or proper enquiry and investigation contrary to Common Law and / or Article 5(4) of the European Convention of Human Rights – that is to say procedural unfairness;
iii) Irrational or wrongful assessment of a high risk of serious harm to the Claimant's ex-partner rendering it necessary to detain and / or failure to have regard to material evidence and considerations.
i) There was no necessity as a matter of law for the Defendant expressly to refer to the presumption in favour of release. Moreover, it is clear from the reasoning contained in the DL that the Defendant did in fact apply such a presumption, but having assessed the Claimant's risk, it concluded, based on all the available evidence, that that risk was "not manageable in the community" thus necessitating detention.ii) The Defendant made no assumptions and drew no inferences concerning the veracity of the assault allegation, nor was it obliged so to do. In any event the decision was not based on the disputed allegation alone but on a number of relevant considerations.
iii) The assessment of risk was within the boundaries of rationality and took into account all relevant considerations.
Factual Background
"be well behaved, not commit any offence and not do anything which could undermine the purposes of your supervision, which are to protect the public, prevent you from re-offending and help you re-settle successfully into the community"
"Few facts were available in relation to the alleged assault except that the victim had a clump of hair missing. You have two daughters one of whom was said to be present during the assault."
The Decision under challenge
"You have been assessed of presenting a low static risk of reoffending (OGRS), a medium risk of general reoffending (OGP) and a low risk of violent reoffending (OVP). You have also been assessed as presenting a high risk of causing serious harm to a known adult, a medium risk of serious harm to children, members of the public and staff members (presumably because of your offence of assaulting a police officer by running over his foot).
In coming to its own assessment of risk the panel took account of the very serious and violent nature of the index offence of burglary that involved preplanning and targeted offending. The panel was particularly concerned about the violence that was used against the victim in order to get her to comply. Little is known by your offender Supervisor or Offender Manager about the extent of the violence and your part in it. In your evidence to the panel you minimised your responsibility for running over the police officer's foot, describing it as an accident, and that you reacted out of shock, not knowing who the person was. You have previous convictions for offences of violence, albeit that they are not for such serious offences.
The panel had concerns about the allegations of assaulting your ex-partner. Although you have not been convicted of any violence against your ex-partner, nonetheless a non-molestation order was imposed as a result of an incident which occurred in November 2014. You continue to demonstrate significant hostility towards you ex-partner, accusing her of having drugs in the house, of fabricating the complaint and that she threatened you for money. You demonstrate limited insight into the effects of your own behaviour.
You have yet to undertake any accredited thinking skills work or interventions to address your involvement in the use of violence during the index offences of burglary and ABH.
The panel considered that your risk of violence would not have included the violence you used during the burglary. As such the panel considered that your OVP underestimated your present risk of future violent offending. Taking all factors into account the panel considered that you continued to present at least a medium risk of violent reoffending with a high risk of causing serious harm to an intimate partner through domestic violence. The panel noted that your risk of serious harm to the public had been reduced to medium whilst you were on licence as a result of the period of ten months that you spent in the community without further violent offending."
"However the panel was concerned about the extremely serious and violent nature of the index offences of burglary and ABH which resulted in significant injury to the police officer. You appeared to have little insight into your reasons for committing the index offences, and minimised your responsibility. Your involvement in the violence used during the burglary has not been explored, and little is known about any lasting injury sustained by the victim. The victim was particularly vulnerable as she had been previously burgled on 4 occasions. The emotional and psychological harm occasioned as a result of the burglary is likely to be lasting and difficult to recover from. You have a previous offence of attempted robbery, albeit that you were convicted when you were a youth.
In addition the panel had significant concerns about your motivation and ability to comply with your licence conditions for the period remaining until your sentence expires in April 2017. Whilst your behaviour could be monitored in Approved Premises for the period whilst you remain resident, the risk management plan would be less robust once you move out. The panel found little evidence of any internal risk management strategies that would help you to avoid future violence either instrumental or expressive.
You continue to present a high risk of serious harm to your ex-partner. Whilst taking account of the time you spent in the community without violent re-offending the panel could not be as confident as your Offender Manager that your risk of serious harm to the public had reduced to a medium level. You have yet to demonstrate any significant acceptance or responsibility for your part in the index offences and circumstances surrounding your recall.
The panel concluded that your risk is not manageable in the community for the period remaining until your sentence expires and therefore did not direct your re-release".
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"All cases are now subject to the same statutory test for release – that a prisoner no longer needs to be confined for the protection of the public – so requires the same assessment of risk."
"2.2.1 Determinate sentence cases after recall
The Board directs the release of recalled determinate prisoners. This direction is binding on the Secretary of State and he must give effect to it.
Although LASPO is silent on the test for release of recalled determinate prisoners, the public protection test may be interpreted to apply to determinate recall cases and so the Board's position is that it is this test that panels must now apply, interpreting it as they see fit. This was accepted as correct in the JR case of King. Panels should not solely refuse to release based on a breakdown in the supervision of a licence. However, where such a breakdown means that continued detention is necessary in order to protect the public, then refusal to release is justified.
However, panels are required to reverse the test, applying a presumption in favour of release and making a positive finding of risk. The case of Sim (2003) established that this applies equally to extended sentence prisoners.
It should be noted that the exercise is a current risk assessment only. Panels are not tasked to decide whether the recall was appropriate or not, although making findings of fact about the recall incident(s) may be an integral part of the current risk assessment."
"26. The law relating to judicial review of this kind may be shortly stated. It is not for this court to substitute its own decision, however strong its view, for that of the Parole Board. It is for the Parole Board, not for the court, to weigh the various considerations it must take into account in deciding whether or not early release is appropriate. The weight it gives to relevant considerations is a matter for the Board, as is, in particular, its assessment of risk …
27. The Panel must give reasons for its decision, but it is not required to address every matter which it considers provided it is clear that it addressed the substance of the issues required to be addressed in a particular case, and that its reasons demonstrate why early release has not been ordered, and are sufficient to demonstrate the lawfulness of the decision."
"26. Nonetheless I am clear that the fact of a charge and a pending prosecution alone cannot without more justify a conclusion that there is a risk of reoffending. If it were, the Parole Board would be delegating to the prosecution authority the assessment of the conduct of a prisoner and the evidence or facts said to give rise to a risk of reoffending. Moreover, if the fact of a charge and a prosecution for the offence was sufficient, it is difficult to see how the Board could give to the prisoner the fair hearing to which he is entitled, as envisaged by the House of Lords in R (Smith and West) v The Parole Board [2005] UKHL 1.
27. That is not to say that the Parole Board is required in every case to consider all of the evidence on which a prosecution is based, or indeed any of it, or that it must necessarily make a finding as to whether the prisoner did or did not commit the offence charged. There will be cases where the undisputed facts are sufficient for it to conclude that there is a risk of reoffending.
28. In the present case, there were before the Board facts in addition to the charge and prosecution alone, and certain facts were undisputed: that the claimant was driving the van and that in it a large and valuable quantity of cannabis was hidden. The Parole Board is entitled to consider whether someone dealing with that quantity of drugs would entrust its custody to someone who was ignorant of its existence and who, presumably, if he discovered it, might surrender it to the police. It is also entitled to have regard to the claimant's past association with drug dealers. "
THE GROUNDS
Ground 1
"… Miss Gallagher had a second submission on this point, namely that the parole Board did not in terms in its reasons use the formula of the Court of Appeal in Sims. The reasons concluded with the observation that 'the risks were not currently manageable in the community'. The risks referred to were the risk of harm to children and the risk of re-offending. There is no suggestion in the reasons of the Parole Board that they failed to recommend his release because he had failed to discharge any burden of proof. On the contrary, the Parole Board noted all the information before them and reached a conclusion, which although not identical in language to the formulation of the Court of Appeal in Sims, is to the same effect".
Ground 2
"The panel also had significant concerns about (the Claimant) motivation and ability to comply with your licence conditions, particularly if they interfere with your ability to see your daughter. Your behaviour in committing further offences on licence suggest that you may comply superficially with supervision but continue to behave in maladaptive ways to achieve your own objectives".
Ground 3
"55 In R (Keyu) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2015] 3 WLR 1665 (decided since the hearing in this appeal) this court had occasion to consider arguments, in the light of Kennedy and Pham , that this court should authorise a general move from the traditional judicial review tests to one of proportionality. Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC (with the agreement of Lord Hughes JSC) thought that the implications could be wide ranging and "profound in constitutional terms", and for that reason would require consideration by an enlarged court. There was no dissent from that view in the other judgments. This is a subject which continues to attract intense academic debate: see, for example, the illuminating collection of essays in The Scope and Intensity of Substantive Review: Traversing Taggart's Rainbow (eds) Wilberg and Elliott, 2015. It is to be hoped that an opportunity can be found in the near future for an authoritative review in this court of the judicial and academic learning on the issue, including relevant comparative material from other common law jurisdictions. Such a review might aim for rather more structured guidance for the lower courts than such imprecise concepts as "anxious scrutiny" and "sliding scales".
56 Even in advance of such a comprehensive review of the tests to be applied to administrative decisions generally, there is a measure of support for the use of proportionality as a test in relation to interference with "fundamental" rights: Keyu , paras 280–282, per Lord Kerr of Tonaghmore JSC, para 304, per Baroness Hale of Richmond DPSC. Lord Kerr referred to the judgment of Lord Reed JSC in Pham (paras 113, 118–119) where he found support in the authorities for the proposition that:
"…where Parliament authorises significant interferences with important legal rights, the courts may interpret the legislation as requiring that any such interference should be no greater than is objectively established to be necessary to achieve the legitimate aim of the interference: in substance, a requirement of proportionality." (Para 119.)
See also my own judgment in the same case (para 60), and those of Lord Mance JSC (paras 95–98) and Lord Sumption JSC (paras 105–109), discussing the merits of a more flexible approach in judging executive interference with important individual rights, in that case the right to British citizenship.
57 On the other hand, in many cases, perhaps most, application of a proportionality test is unlikely to lead to a different result from traditional grounds of judicial review. This is particularly true of cases involving issues of national security. In Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No 2) [2014] AC 700 (which concerned another security council regime, relating to nuclear weapons), there was not only majority and minority agreement as to the steps involved in an assessment of "proportionality" (demanded in that case by the relevant statute), but also, within that context, general recognition that on issues of national security a large margin of judgment was accorded to the Executive: paras 20–21 per Lord Sumption JSC, para 98 per Lord Reed JSC. The difference turned on contrasting views as to the allegedly discriminatory nature of the restrictions in that case. Similar considerations apply in the present case.
58 Mr Otty asks us to go further and to hold that the Divisional Court should have conducted a full "merits review" of the Secretary of State's decision. He finds support in the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Ahmed in which such a submission appeared to find favour with Sir Anthony Clarke MR and Wilson LJ [2010] 2 AC 534, 578, 587. I agree with the Court of Appeal (para 38) that those observations were made in the context of an Order made under a domestic statute, and were overtaken by the decision of this court that the Order was ultra vires. In my view, they can have no application in the present context, which concerns the Secretary of State's functions as a member of a UN committee. Even accepting that his decision is judicially reviewable, it is to the member states, as members of the committee, that the Security Council has entrusted the task of determining whether the criteria for listing are fulfilled. It would be quite inconsistent with that regime for a national court to substitute its own assessment of those matters."
Conclusion