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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gourlay, R (on the application of) v Parole Board [2014] EWHC 4763 (Admin) (24 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4763.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4763 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
1 Oxford Row Leeds West Yorkshire LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF GOURLAY | Claimant | |
v | ||
PAROLE BOARD | Defendant |
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The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
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"Your risks are to young women in the community who are known to you when you and perhaps they have been drinking (perhaps excessively)."
"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 them to take more responsibility for their actions.
2. The main facilities, interventions, 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 risks and benefits. However, the Parole Board's emphasis should be on the risk reduction aspect and, in particular, on the need for the lifer to have made a significant progress in changing their attitudes and tackling behavioural problems in closed conditions, without which a move to open conditions will not generally be considered."
"1. Before recommending the transfer of a lifer to open conditions, the Parole Board must consider:
2. all information before it, including any written or oral evidence obtained by the Board.
3. each case on its individual merits without discrimination on any grounds.
4. the Parole Board must take the following main factors into account when evaluating the risks of transfer against the benefits:
5. the extent to which the lifer has made sufficient progress during sentence in addressing and reducing risk to a level consistent with protecting the public from harm, in circumstances where the lifer in open conditions would be in the community, unsupervised, under licensed temporary release;
6. the extent to which the lifer is likely to comply with the conditions of any such form of temporary release;
7. the extent to which the lifer is considered trustworthy enough not to abscond;
8. the extent to which the lifer is likely to derive benefit from being able to address areas of concern and to be tested in a more realistic environment, such as to suggest that a transfer to open conditions is worthwhile at that stage.
9. In assessing risk in such matters, the Parole Board shall consider the following information, where relevant and where available, before recommending the lifer's transfer to open conditions, recognising that the weight and relevance attached to particular information may vary according to the circumstances of each case:
10. The lifer's background, including the nature, circumstances and pattern of any previous offending;
11. the nature and circumstances of the index offence and the reasons for it, including any information provided in relation to its impact on the victim or victim's family;
12. the trial judge's sentencing comments or report to the Secretary of State, and any probation, medical, or other relevant reports or material prepared for the court;
13. whether the lifer has made positive and successful efforts to address the attitudes and behavioural problems which led to the commission of the index offence;
14. the nature of any offences against prison discipline committed by the lifer;
15. the lifer's attitude and behaviour to other prisoners and staff;
16. the category of security in which the lifer is held and any reasons or reports provided by the Prison Service for such categorisation, particularly in relation to those lifers held in Category A conditions of security;
17. the lifer's awareness of the impact of the index offence, particularly in relation to the victim or victim's family, and the extent of any demonstrable insight into their attitudes and behavioural problems and whether they have taken steps to reduce risk through the achievement of life sentence plan targets;
18. any medical, psychiatric or psychological considerations (particularly if there is a history of mental instability);
19. the lifer's response when placed in positions of trust, including any outside activities and any escorted absences from closed prisons;
20. any indication of predicted risk as determined by a validated actuarial risk predictor model or any other structured assessment of the lifer's risk and treatment needs.
21. Before recommending transfer to open conditions, the Parole Board shall also consider the lifer's relationship with the Probation Service (in particular the supervising probation officer), and other outside support such as family and friends."
"the extent to which the lifer has made sufficient progress considering sentence in addressing and reducing risk to a level consistent with protecting the public from harm, in circumstances where the lifer in open conditions would be in the community unsupervised under licensed temporary release." (para. 5)
and:
"the extent to which the lifer is likely to comply with conditions of any such form temporary release." (para. 6)
Further, "in assessing risk in such matters" the Parole Board must consider identified information which includes:
"whether the lifer has made positive and successful efforts to address the attitudes and behavioural problems which led to the commission of the index offence..." (para. 13)
and:
"the lifer's awareness of the impact of the index offence, particularly in relation to the victim's family, and extent of any demonstrable insight into their attitudes and behavioural problems and whether they have taken accepts to reduce risk through the achievement of life sentence plan targets." (para. 17)
"The Panel does not consider your risk levels have reduced to the point where they can be safely managed in open conditions and does not recommend a transfer to open conditions. Both you and the prison authorities must give further consideration to how your risk levels may be reduced."
"Your denials have thus far prevented you from accessing any courses designed to address the risks surrounding sexual offending. You have been assessed for the Sexual Offenders Treatment Programme (SOTP) but have not met the criteria because of your denials. You have completed the more generic courses Enhanced Thinking Skills; Alcohol Awareness and Thinking Skills Programme. The Panel notes that, during your earlier sentence, you completed the Reasoning and Rehabilitation Course but went on to commit a similar offence shortly after release - providing evidence that that sort of intervention was not sufficient to lower your risks factors.
The Panel noted that you have made good efforts to review your overall behaviour and how you might live in future. However concerns remain about your general attitudes regarding entitlement as evidenced by the work you have completed with psychologists.
The view of all witnesses and other report writers is clear and stark: you cannot reduce your risk factors without attending a SOTP course and you cannot attend SOTP without admitting at least some sexual offending. Your Offender Manager showed some insight into the position this put you in. He was able to confirm the Panel's understanding that courses to address sexual offending which deniers can access are currently being piloted both in the community and the closed estate. That is perhaps a necessary development after the clearly expressed view of the Court of Appeal that denial alone is not a sufficient reason for refusing a progressive move or release.
Your general behaviour in prison gives no cause for concern; you have no recent adjudications and are an enhanced prisoner. There has been no evidence of violent or sexually inappropriate behaviour but that is to be expected within a closed prison estate. Your risks are to young women in the community who are known to you when you, and perhaps they, have been drinking (perhaps excessively)."
Then under the section 6 headed "Panel's assessment of current risk of re-conviction and serious harm" the conclusion of the Panel is that given the number of the offences including ones committed on bail and shortly after release, the claimant's risk of committing further offences of a sexual nature "remains high until your sexual treatment needs have been addressed".
"The upshot is that it would be wrong to treat the prisoner's denial of guilt as conclusive, or all but conclusive against the grant of parole on the basis of the risk of future offending, but it may be a relevant, indeed a highly relevant factor in any given case. In my judgment, therefore, where a denial of guilt is involved, a careful analysis of the facts of and the decision in the case in question is required to see whether there has been an impermissible emphasis on that denial of guilt."
Speaking for myself, I would not accept as the opening sentence of that paragraph as being a necessarily accurate analysis of the case law which had gone before. It seems to me what the previous decisions of the Court of Appeal indicate is that a prisoner's denial may well be a determinative consideration but not necessarily so ,and that a very careful assessment has to be taken by the Parole Board of all the competing factors in coming to its conclusions as to whether or not a prisoner's risk has been sufficiently reduced so as to enable a recommendation that he can be safely transferred to open conditions. I refer to the totality of the previous decisions which Judge Waksman set out at paragraphs 72 through to paragraphs 77 of his judgment. I refer to Pill LJ's observations at paragraph 13, in Oyston v The Parole Board [2000] EWCA Crim 3552 which in itself was referring to a Divisional Court decision in Zulfikar (26th July 1995) and set out a series of observations from that decision. Those observations included the following:
"Should he be denied parole solely because of his attitude to the offence? In the majority of cases I think plainly not. Each case will depend on its own circumstances and this Court should avoid trying to lay down principles which may not be universally applicable... At one end of the scale is the persistent offender, in particular the persistent sex offender, who refuses to accept guilt in the face of clear evidence and is unable to accept that he has a propensity to such conduct which needs to be tackled if he is not offend again. In such a case it may well be a determinative consideration..."
"But in some cases, particularly cases of serious persistent violent of sexual crime, a continued denial of guilt will almost inevitably mean the risk posed by the prisoner ... if he is paroled either remains high or, at lease, cannot be objectively assessed. In such cases the Board is entitled, (perhaps obliged) to deny a recommendation."
"... the task of the Parole Board is the same as in any other case: to assess the risk from a particular prisoner if released on parole, will offend again. In making this assessment the Parole Board must assume the correctness of any conviction. It can give no credit to the prisoner's denial. Such denial will always be a factor and may be a very significant factor in the Board's assessment of risk, but it will only be one factor and must be considered in the light of all other relevant factors. In almost any case the Board would be quite wrong to treat the prisoner's denial as irrelevant, but also quite wrong to treat a prisoner's denial as necessarily conclusive against the grant of parole."
I have emphasised the word "necessarily" in those observations.