![]() |
[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 >> Wallace, R (On the Application Of) v Parole Board for England And Wales [2017] EWHC 295 (Admin) (21 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/295.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 295 (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 DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
____________________
R (on the application of NADINE WALLACE) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
PAROLE BOARD FOR ENGLAND AND WALES |
Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 7 February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Upper Tribunal Judge Markus QC:
Introduction
Factual background
"Should the board not direct closed conditions it would be my recommendation that Ms Wallace is tested in open conditions which would allow her to attend local recovery appointments to prove commitment and engagement and work towards funding in a rehab facility, as it was highlighted that Ms Wallace would need to provide engagement whilst in the community in order to secure funding. This would allow Ms Wallace to have home ROTL to see her family and continue a supportive relationship with them."
"I have considered two options in considering how Ms Wallace can evidence a reduction in risk associated with her drug and alcohol misuse and in her ability to comply with future Licence Conditions. The first being her move to HMP Send where she can access Rapt and their Therapeutic Community and PIPE Unit. I understand from her Offender Supervisor … that this does present an opportunity for a less secure setting. The second being a move to HMP Askham Grance which is an Open Prison where Ms Wallace would engage fully with Drug and Alcohol Services Providing a route for a more positive outcome for a potential Residential Placement place.
I have considered how this could be achieved in the community but because Ms Wallace has not previously engaged fully with drug and alcohol services in the community she was declined for residential rehabilitation. I am very keen to ensure Ms Wallace has a route forward and that we do not simply have a revolving door scenario."
"The Parole Board is empowered to direct your release if it is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that you be confined. The panel is also required to consider your suitability for transfer to open conditions and will make this recommendation where it finds that your risks are low enough to be safely managed in conditions of lower security where you would at times be in the community unsupervised."
"Your offender manager's report to the panel was unclear in its recommendation but she told the panel in her oral evidence that in her view, your risks were low enough for open conditions but not for re-release on licence because of your unstable and unpredictable behaviour. She identified your emotional self-management and substance misuse as enduring risk factors which she thought could be addressed and managed in open conditions by the access you could have to counselling and mental health support during periods of temporary licence. The panel found this argument unconvincing. These areas of risk are core risk factors which have not been manageable in a number of highly supported placements. The panel was not convinced that the ability to access counselling and mental health support from open conditions would be sufficient to manage your risks. Ms King did not believe you had ever spent long enough in the community to properly test your ability to manage your own risks of violence and said that you would benefit from open conditions because of the chance to reflect on previous failures on licence and to gradually build and develop a more realistic and fully tested release plan. The panel noted you have had 3 previous periods in open conditions and these have not led to a successful long term outcome.
…Ms Wright also supported your transfer to open conditions where she felt you posed an acceptable level of risk because of the potential sanction of being returned to closed conditions. She could not explain however why this would be effective on this occasion given your long history of disregarding such sanctions. Neither of the professional witnesses were able to rule out a risk of abscond and noted your previous history in relation to non-compliance..."
"Until this has been achieved, the panel was satisfied that you could not be safely managed in the community and that for the protection of the public should remain in prison. It did not direct release."
"The panel also gave very careful consideration to your suitability for open conditions which was recommended by both of the professional witnesses albeit with some reservations. You have a poor record in open conditions although the panel noted that you have not been in a category D environment for several years. The current recommendations were predicated on the view that you would be able to access support for both your emotional well-being and your substance misuse and that you would be in a better position therefore to gradually rebuild your life in the community. The panel struggled with this; it relies on you having sufficient insight and motivation into your risks to be able to effectively address them, and also upon you taking the necessary responsibility to engage with the relevant support services. The panel did not have evidence of either of these things and was particularly concerned about the ease with which you would be able to obtain alcohol and/or drugs in the open estate.
The panel concluded that because of the evidence that core risks underpinning your risks of violence and serious harm remain active, that these could not be reliably managed in open conditions and should be re-examined and addressed in closed conditions first. It therefore did not recommend a transfer to open conditions."
Legal framework
"Introduction
1. A period in open conditions can in certain circumstances be beneficial for those indeterminate sentence prisoners (ISPs) who are eligible to be considered for such a transfer.
2. Open conditions can be particularly beneficial for such ISPs, where they have spent a long time in custody, as it gives them the opportunity to be considered for resettlement leave (although there is no automatic entitlement to such leave and any decision to grant such leave will depend upon a careful assessment of risk). It is not necessary in every case, however, for an offender to spend time in open conditions in order for the Parole Board to direct their release.
3. The main facilities, interventions, and resources for addressing and reducing core risk factors exist principally in the closed prison estate. 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.
…
5. A move to open conditions should be based on a balanced assessment of risk and benefits. However, the Parole Board's emphasis should be on the risk reduction aspect and, in particular, on the need for the ISP 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 generally be considered.
Directions
6. Before recommending the transfer of an ISP to open conditions, the Parole Board must consider:-
- all information before it, including any written or oral evidence obtained by the Board; and
- each case on its individual merits without discrimination on any grounds.
7. The Parole Board must take the following main factors into account when evaluating the risks of transfer against the benefits:-
a) the extent to which the ISP has made sufficient progress during the sentence in addressing and reducing risk to a level consistent with protecting the public from harm, in circumstances where the ISP in open conditions may be in the community, unsupervised, under licensed temporary release;
b) the extent to which the ISP is likely to comply with the conditions of any such form of temporary release (should the authorities in the open prison assess him as suitable for temporary release);
c) the extent to which the ISP is considered trustworthy enough not to abscond; and
d) the extent to which the ISP is likely to derive benefit from being able to address areas of concern and to be tested in the open conditions environment such as to suggest that a transfer to open conditions is worthwhile at that stage."
"Where the panel considers both release and in the alternative a recommendation for open conditions, it must be made clear in the decision letter that the panel applied the test for release and SEPARATELY conducted a balancing exercise in relation to suitability for open conditions.
There must be express reference to the balancing exercise in the decision. It is not enough for the panel to refer to the need to have regard to the directions of the Secretary of State or note the support the prisoner had from professionals for transfer (which if analysed is often likely to contain references to the benefits which could be directly derived from transfer). The panel must expressly state what factors which go towards benefit were taken into account."
The Claimant's submissions
Analysis
"31. I remind myself that I must not in any way interfere with the discretion or judgement of the Parole Board, who, as Turner J. observed in ex parte Hart (unreported 24th May 2000) are 'uniquely qualified' to make the decisions it is called upon to make. I must ask myself whether they have carried out their task in accordance with the law, as set out in the statutory directions. I must consider whether the decision falls within the range of decisions which a reasonable panel might make. I must ask whether the reasons for the decision are proper, sufficient and intelligible."