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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Moludi, On the Review of the Tariff in the case of [2021] EWHC 264 (QB) (16 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/264.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 264 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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On the review of the tariff in the case of FALCO MOLUDI |
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Crown Copyright ©
The offence and sentence
The criteria for reduction of the minimum term
a. The offender has made exceptional and unforeseen progress during his sentence.
b. The offender's welfare may be seriously prejudiced by his or her continued imprisonment, and the public interest in the applicant's welfare outweighs the public interest in a further period of imprisonment lasting until the expiry of the current minimum term.
c. There is a new matter which calls into question the basis of the original decision to set the minimum term at a particular level.
Whether Mr Moludi has made exceptional and unforeseen progress
a. He has completed offending behaviour programmes: PASRO; TSP and Resolve. In addition, since being at HMP The Mount he has completed the Sycamore Tree Victim Awareness course.
b. According to Ms Jackson, he now displays genuine remorse and his behaviour has significantly improved and his attitude has matured.
c. He has undertaken several educational courses including employability and responsibility, developing relations, money management and family links.
d. Ms Jackson comments that Mr Moludi is currently a PIDS worker and enjoys mentoring other prisoners
e. Ms Jackson comments that since Mr Moludi's last tariff review Mr Moludi's attitude has improved, he has developed better insight into the impact of his offending behaviour on the victim's family and he has received positive feedback from staff.
f. In Ms Jackson's opinion, Mr Moludi has made exceptional progress since his move from Grendon Underwood.
g. The most recent OASyS completed on 24th April 2019 also speaks of Mr Moludi's progress. The report writer comments that in the past his offending was linked to gang membership. Mr Moludi was also spending a significant amount (£10-£20 per day) on cannabis. Since November 2016 he has had no adjudications and no negative entries about his behaviour. On the contrary there have been 22 positive entries which have referred to peer mentoring, assisting staff, carrying out learner led activity, being polite, carrying out tasks, 'having an excellent attitude'.
h. The OASyS report notes that he had gained enhanced IEP status. On occasions he had lost this, but he had recently retained it for a considerable period (since April 2016). The report writer commented that Mr Moludi 'appears to be an individual who has reflected on his past, has insight into his offence and feels his identity has changed since the beginning of his sentence.' When he was asked if he would offend again, he replied, 'Definitely not… I've had too much time in prison. I'm tired.'
i. Lauren Giles, a probation officer and Mr Moludi's Offender Supervisor, also considered that Mr Moludi was making exceptional progress in custody.
Conclusion