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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> JD v Secretary of State for Justice [2022] EWHC 1238 (Admin) (25 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1238.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1238 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Justice |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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Parole Board for England and Wales |
Interested Party |
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Jason Pobjoy and Will Bordell (instructed by Secretary of State for Justice)
for the Defendant
Fraser Campbell (instructed by GLD) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 19 May 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
THE GROUNDS
i. The proceedings were vitiated by procedural unfairness in
that:
a. the PB failed to make any attempt at local resolution, and to follow any internal disciplinary process and the Termination Panel concluded that such measures might have enabled the issue to be resolved without recourse to the Protocol;
b. the PB failed to properly or adequately particularise its case when making the referral, and its case evolved over time;
c. the PB disclosed important evidence late in the evening before the hearing, and further evidence on the morning of the hearing, causing unfairness to the Claimant in circumstances whereby she had requested an adjournment, or for the evidence to be excluded, and the Panel did not rule on her application but proceeded with the hearing.
ii. The SSJ's acceptance of the recommendation to terminate the Claimant's PB membership was unreasonable in circumstances where:
a. the PB had failed to make any attempt at local resolution, and to follow any internal disciplinary process and the Termination Panel concluded that such measures might have enabled the issue to be resolved without recourse to the Protocol;
b. the recommendation arose from a single, isolated incident in which the Claimant was acting alone as a single member Panel, and no or no sufficient consideration was given to alternative sanctions.
THE BACKGROUND
THE CLAIMANT'S EXPLANATION
"The Secretary of State may at any time terminate your appointment on the recommendation of an independent panel established under an agreement between the Parole Board and the Secretary of State. That agreement shall set out the procedures to be taken by the panel when considering whether or not to make a recommendation, and shall provide that a recommendation can be made if you: [...]
(b) have failed to comply with the Parole Board's Quality Assurance Framework or the Parole Board's Code of Conduct [...]."
PROCEDURAL UNFAIRNESS
The PB failed to make any attempt at local resolution, and to follow any internal disciplinary process and the Termination Panel concluded that such measures might have enabled the issue to be resolved without recourse to the Protocol.
I am satisfied that it is not arguable that it behoved the PB to initiate any internal disciplinary process before the matter was referred to the Panel. No such requirement is to be found in the Agreed Protocol followed by the PB. The claimant relies upon a draft Policy document entitled "Breaches of Conduct by Members" which does make reference to the consideration of informal action to be considered at an early stage. However, this document was not in force at the time when the disciplinary action was being taken in this case. Furthermore, even if it had been in force, it provides that if a matter is too serious to be classed as minor then formal action should be taken. On any view, at the time the matter had been referred to the Panel, the claimant's admitted conduct could not properly be characterised as being "minor". I can detect no procedural unfairness arising from the sequence of events leading to the Panel hearing.
This ground is hopeless. The central, substantive issue between the claimant and the PB was simplicity itself and remained so throughout. She had authorised the release of a prisoner on grounds which were deeply flawed and which, had she read the papers with any care, she would have realised were deeply flawed. She was fully equipped to deal with this point at the hearing. The Panel disbelieved her explanation and its conclusion in this regard cannot be faulted. No amount of further particularisation was necessary or, indeed, appropriate.
The evidence disclosed on the evening before the hearing was in response to a witness statement from the claimant running to no fewer than 325 paragraphs dated but two days earlier. Her counsel argued before me that the PB's witness statements in response contained little that was new. I agree. The claimant's original counsel was given plenty of time to read this material before the hearing commenced and she made no complaint at the time that this had been inadequate.
SUBSTANTIVE GROUNDS
The recommendation arose from a single, isolated incident in which the Claimant was acting alone as a single member panel, and no or no sufficient consideration was given to alternative sanctions.
I readily appreciate that the claimant faces an uphill challenge in persuading the court that the Panel's choice of sanction was so flawed as to be properly reviewable within the constraints of judicial review. As the Panel rightly pointed out, this was a release decision resulting from an act of gross negligence which had the potential to compromise public protection and undermine the public confidence in the PB.
(i) Why, despite the noted and undoubted seriousness of the claimant's conduct, no measures short of termination had fallen to be considered and why, if considered, they had been rejected. (I note, in passing, that it may have been open to the Panel to have considered that the claimant's untruthful explanation for what she had done (the coversheet policy) may have militated against the suitability of a lesser sanction but no such conclusion, had it been reached, was articulated.)
(ii) Any matters of personal mitigation relating, by way of example only, to the claimant's ill-health and years of service.
(iii) The fact that when another Panel Member reviewed WP's file, they, too, concluded that WP should be released, notwithstanding correction of the error made by the claimant.