The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice (Dominic
Raab) Today I am publishing the root and branch review of the
parole system, and copies have been deposited in the Library. I
start by paying tribute to the chief executive officer and the
chair of the Parole Board for England and Wales, Martin Jones and
Caroline Corby, and to all the staff who work so tirelessly to
discharge their important responsibilities. They are dedicated and
committed public servants....Request free trial
The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice ()
Today I am publishing the root and branch review of the parole
system, and copies have been deposited in the Library.
I start by paying tribute to the chief executive officer and the
chair of the Parole Board for England and Wales, Martin Jones and
Caroline Corby, and to all the staff who work so tirelessly to
discharge their important responsibilities. They are dedicated
and committed public servants.
Before I address the detail of the statement, and with your
forbearance, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will update the House on
this morning’s news. In the light of the Parole Board’s direction
to release Tracey Connelly, and having carefully read the
decision, I have decided to apply to the Parole Board seeking its
reconsideration.
More generally, the role of the Parole Board in deciding on the
appropriateness of releasing a criminal offender from prison,
including many convicted of very serious violent and sexual
offences, is clearly of paramount importance to protecting the
public and to maintaining and sustaining public confidence in our
justice system. It is the first duty of Government to protect the
public.
In recent years, a number of decisions to release offenders who
committed heinous crimes have led to disquiet, concern and,
regrettably, an erosion of public confidence. Take the case of
John Worboys, who is serving a discretionary life sentence for
rape and other sexual offences. The Parole Board’s decision in
January 2018 to release him on licence caused deep concern among
his victims and the wider public. It was subject to a successful
legal challenge, after which the Crown Prosecution Service
successfully prosecuted him for attacking four further women.
I know that hon. Members on both sides of the House have raised
the case of Colin Pitchfork, who was convicted of the rape and
murder of Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth. The Parole Board decided
to release Pitchfork in 2021, and it rejected the challenge by
the then Justice Secretary, my right hon. and learned Friend the
Member for South Swindon (Sir ). The understandable public
anxiety was further compounded when Pitchfork was recalled to
prison just two months after release for approaching women in
breach of his licence conditions.
I make a broader point that in these kinds of cases, and in many
others that do not attract the same level of media attention or
public interest, victims feel their trauma and raw fear are
neither recognised nor understood. Likewise, the public
inevitably begin to question the reliability of decision making
when serious offenders are recalled to prison for breaches of
their licence or for committing further offences on release.
To give the House a sense of scale, in 2020-21 the Parole Board’s
annual report stated that 27 offenders went on to be charged with
a serious further offence following release directed by the
Parole Board panel. There were 40 cases of serious further
offences being charged in each of the preceding two years. Placed
in context, it is fair to say this is only a fraction of all
cases, but more than once a fortnight an offender goes on to
commit a serious offence while subject to supervision.
At present, victims who wish to challenge a decision by the
Parole Board to release a prisoner have the option of asking the
Justice Secretary to apply for the decision to be reconsidered,
which is an important innovation that I exercised today for a
person convicted in the harrowing case of Baby P. There have been
39 interventions since the challenge mechanism was set up two
years ago, with four leading to a change in the release
decision.
Following the review published today, I believe the case for
reform is clear and made out. In arriving at this conclusion, it
is worth pausing to acknowledge the shift in the Parole Board’s
approach over time. The statutory test was established in 1991
and states
“The Parole Board must not give a direction”—
for release—
“unless the Board is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for
the protection of the public that the person should be
confined.”
It is clear from this that the overriding test focuses on public
protection. However, in the absence of further guidance from
Parliament, the way in which the release test has been
interpreted and applied over time has shifted, moving away from
Parliament’s original intention. In fact, as early as the Bradley
judgment in 1991, the High Court concluded:
“The Parole Board have to carry out a balancing exercise between
the legitimate conflicting interests of both prisoner and
public.”
To summarise, the statutory test has morphed over time from a
strict public protection test to a balancing exercise between, on
the one hand, the responsibility of the state to protect the
public and, on the other hand, the rights of the prisoner.
Whatever the rights and wrongs, that was palpably not the
original intention of Parliament.
I make it clear that I am not criticising the courts, which have
sought to apply a generic statutory test without more
prescriptive guidance from Parliament, nor am I criticising
members of the Parole Board, as I hope I have made clear. It is
worth saying that, contrary to public perception, it is often
fiendishly difficult to come to a reliable assessment of an
offender’s risk many years after their original crimes. Although
psychiatric assessments and social science can offer guidance,
risk assessments in such cases are inherently uncertain and
imprecise. We need to be more honest and open about that in our
public debate.
In any case, I believe the focus in this critical decision making
has become adrift from its original moorings. This Government
will again anchor Parole Board decision making on the cardinal
principle of public protection. When it comes to assessing the
risk to victims and public safety, we will introduce a
precautionary principle to reinforce public confidence in the
system. In cases involving those who have committed the most
serious crimes, we will introduce a ministerial check on release
decisions, exercised by the Justice Secretary.
The package of reforms published today will strengthen the focus
on public protection at every stage. First, we will revise the
statutory test for release and replace the current approach that
balances the rights of dangerous offenders against public safety
with an overriding focus on public protection, by providing in
primary legislation further detailed criteria for the application
of the statutory test.
Secondly, we will make sure that the Parole Board is better
equipped to make credible and realistic assessments of risk. It
is striking that, as of last year, only 5% of all Parole Board
panel members come from a law enforcement background. Again, I
make no criticism of the current panel members, but that is a
significant deficit. I believe the deficit is wrong, and our
reforms will ensure that the people we charge with making finely
balanced assessments of future risk have greater first-hand
operational experience of protecting the public from serious
offenders. We will change this imbalance by mandating the Parole
Board to recruit more members with operational law enforcement
experience, and the Ministry of Justice will run a recruitment
campaign to bolster its numbers. Critically, in Parole Board
cases involving the top-tier cohort of serious violent and sexual
offenders, we will require by law that at least one of the three
panel members has a law enforcement background.
The third key reform is that, for the top-tier cohort of
high-risk offenders who have committed the most serious offences,
we will introduce ministerial oversight of Parole Board decisions
to release such offenders back into the community, based on our
assessment of the dangerousness of the offender, the risk of
serious further offending and public confidence. These top-tier
offenders will comprise those serving sentences for murder, rape,
terrorism and causing or allowing the death of a child. In those
cases, we will make two specific changes. The Parole Board will
be able to refer a case to the Justice Secretary if it cannot
confidently conclude whether, on the evidence, the statutory test
for release has been met. In addition, we will introduce
ministerial oversight over any decision to release any offender
in the top-tier cohort of serious offenders. Under our reforms,
in that top tier of cases the Justice Secretary will have the
power to refuse release, subject to judicial challenge, on very
clearly prescribed grounds, in the upper tribunal. I believe that
is warranted as an extra check and safeguard to protect the
public. I have not yet ruled out entirely an alternative model
that could establish a three-person panel chaired by the Justice
Secretary with the same power to refuse release, subject to
judicial review in the normal way. We will consider further
detail of the mechanism in order to strike the most effective
balance.
We are making these reforms because the concept of risk is
notoriously difficult to assess in these kinds of cases. We are
doing it because the public expect their safety to be the
overriding consideration and because, ultimately, it involves a
judgment call about public protection, and the public expect
Ministers to take responsibility for their safety. Let me be
equally clear that there is no such thing as a risk-free society;
we cannot guarantee that no one released from prison will go on
to commit a serious crime. Let us be very clear about that as we
have a more honest debate about the assessment of risk.
Nevertheless, I believe that these measures are necessary to
reinforce public safety and public confidence, and we will
legislate for them as soon as possible. I should also say that we
will do so alongside our proposed Bill of Rights, to ensure that
the will of Parliament and that focus on public protection is not
undermined by the Human Rights Act. Indeed, our reforms to parole
yet again highlight the compelling case for a Bill of Rights.
Our fourth reform will increase victim participation in parole
hearings, thereby delivering on this Government’s manifesto
commitment. I recognise that parole decisions will be immensely
and acutely traumatic moments for many victims, as they are
forced to remember, go through and revisit the ordeal and
suffering that they have already been though. Some will not wish
to be involved, whereas others will want their voices to be
heard, and I believe they should have that right. So we will give
victims the right to attend a parole hearing in full, for the
first time, should they wish to do so. In addition, we will
require the board to take into account submissions made by
victims and allow victims to ask questions through those
submissions. The voice of victims will be at the centre of the
process, not just some lingering afterthought.
Finally, although separate from parole decision making, similar
considerations of risk and public concern have arisen in the
context of decisions to transfer prisoners to prisons in open
conditions. That is why in December 2021 I changed the process to
introduce a ministerial check on such decisions, guided by
similar principles to those that I have already set out. That is
what led to my decision this month to reject the Parole Board’s
recommendation to move Steven Ling, who raped and killed a woman,
to an open prison. I declined the move in the interest of public
protection and public confidence.
In sum, our reforms will ensure that those offenders who present
the highest risk to public safety are reviewed more rigorously,
with additional ministerial oversight. Protecting the public is
the Government’s top priority. The proposals in this review will
reinforce public safety. I commend this statement to the
House.
1.43pm
(Croydon North) (Lab/Co-op)
I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of his statement
earlier today. It is hugely timely, given the disturbing news
about the potential release of Baby P’s killer. I fully support
the Secretary of State in seeking a review of that. In broad
terms, I welcome his statement too. It is crucial that public
protection is paramount and that victims are right at the heart
of the criminal justice system. Currently, too many victims feel
that their views are not taken sufficiently into account, either
in parole decisions or in sentencing, and that leads directly to
public safety concerns, which must be taken more seriously.
Labour will put public safety at the core of our contract with
the British people. Sadly, the same cannot be said of this
Government.
It is less than two months since the convicted sex abuser Paul
Robson walked out of a low-category open prison in Lincolnshire.
After he escaped, the public were warned that Robson was a
serious danger to women and children. He clearly should never
have been in a low-security prison in the first place. The Parole
Board made that recommendation, but it was the Secretary of State
who approved it. He or his predecessors already had the necessary
powers, they just did not use them. So what will stop him making
serious mistakes like that again when he exercises his new check
and oversight powers in, potentially, hundreds more cases? Labour
wants victims to have the right to make a new personal statement
saying how they would feel if the prisoner is released. We would
like any assessment of the risk to the public to include the risk
of re-traumatising the victim, and to prevent released prisoners
from living near their victim if that is against the victim’s
wishes. Will the Secretary of State consider those additional
proposals?
The appalling decision to release the multiple rapist John
Worboys was only stopped after the Centre for Women’s Justice
sued the Government, using rights established by the last Labour
Government. Sir Peter Gross’s review made sensible proposals to
improve these rights, including the UK’s margin of appreciation
over interpretations we would all object to. But the Secretary of
State will be throwing the baby out with the bathwater if he uses
that concern as an excuse to take away British rights that
protect British people from dangerous criminals, as they did in
that case. Too many victims of crime do not get a say over what
happens to criminals because those criminals are never prosecuted
in the first place. That is because this Conservative Government
cut 21,000 police officers and still have not replaced them,
despite imposing the highest rates of personal taxation for 70
years —that is 21,000 people with law enforcement experience that
his party sacked, whom he might now approach to sit on parole
boards, as he suggests.
The Secretary of State spoke about rape cases in this statement,
but only 1.5% of reported rape cases ever make it to court. Those
that do now take more than 1,000 days, on average, before the
trial starts—these are the longest delays in British legal
history. What message does he think that sends about public
safety and public protection? Under this Government, prosecution
rates for crimes including burglary, robbery, car crime and fraud
are so low that they have, in effect, been decriminalised. There
are so few police left that victims are told to fill in a form
online and hardly any of them ever hear anything again. It is no
wonder that the Government stand accused of going soft on these
crimes. Does he recognise that letting criminals get away with
crime damages public safety and erodes confidence in the justice
system, which is something he is telling us this afternoon that
he wants to strengthen? The Victims’ Commissioner has called on
the Government to establish a new victims’ right to review. That
would give victims the power to challenge decisions by the police
and the Crown Prosecution Service not to prosecute or to drop
prosecutions. The Secretary of State did not mention that in his
statement, so will he tell us whether he intends to introduce
proposals along those lines in future?
Public protection requires victims to be active participants
throughout the criminal justice process, including in parole
decisions. Their insights strengthen public safety and public
confidence in the system. Today’s statement is a step forward and
it recognises some of the Government’s mistakes, but it could
have been bigger.
Let me start by thanking the hon. Gentleman for his support for
the decision taken today in the Tracey Connelly case. I think he
also gave wholesale backing to the reforms I set out in my
statement, which is important. I want to welcome what I therefore
hope will be cross-party support when we come to legislate for
them; he cannot support the aims and then not will the means, and
I hope that that becomes clear as we take the proposals through
the House.
The hon. Gentleman asked about absconds, which is an issue of
significant concern. I should say to him that between 2009-10 and
today, the level of absconds from prisons has fallen to a third
of the level it was under the last Labour Government. He might
want to think a little about that before he makes unfounded
assertions.
In fairness, the hon. Gentleman did ask about the case of Shane
Farrington, who absconded on 24 March but was rearrested on 26
March. He is ineligible for a return to open conditions for two
years. The hon. Gentleman made a point about our being empowered
to do something; actually, that took place in October and I
changed the rules in December, as I have made clear to the
House.
I welcome what the hon. Gentleman said about the role of victims.
We are making important changes and I welcome his support for
them. I gently point out that, even before the spending review,
the level of victims funding was three times the level it was at
under the Labour Government. He talks about victims; our record
is infinitely better, but we are restless to do far more.
More generally, the history of the reforms we are undertaking
took place on Labour’s watch, because in 2008 Labour gave up the
power to block the release of prisoners who had been sentenced to
more than 15 years and then legislated to make the changes—in
fairness, they were forced on that Government by the Human Rights
Act—permanent. As a result, the number of those recalled on life
licence skyrocketed, going up almost sevenfold. The hon.
Gentleman should, then, have a little more humility about where
the problem came from.
The hon. Gentleman criticised our approach to the Bill of Rights,
but it is clear that we cannot pursue the reforms I have set out
and reverse the challenges that were made under the Human Rights
Act without our Bill of Rights. Again, the question for the
Labour party is going to be whether it just wills the ends or is
willing to back the means.
Last month, I picked up my copy of the Daily Mirror, as I do, and
read through it. I read that the hon. Gentleman had said that
under the previous Labour leader, the right hon. Member for
Islington North (), Labour had appeared to
care
“more about criminals than their victims”.
That is a greater measure of humility, but the hon. Gentleman
should take a bit of responsibility for his record. He and the
shadow Cabinet voted against extra funding for more police
officers. They voted against the tougher sentences for dangerous
offenders in the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill—the
kind of thing that would protect victims and the public. I am
glad that, on this issue at least, the hon. Gentleman is showing
that he is willing to support measures that will stand up for
victims and protect the public. The proof of the pudding will be
in how the Opposition vote when all the measures come before the
House.
(New Forest East) (Con)
The statement was excellent. My right hon. Friend is clearly
revelling in an area of policy in which he has a great deal of
expertise. One aspect of which I did not hear mention was the
concept of punishment. Some offences, particularly the sort we
are dealing with in this context, are absolutely heinous. It
baffles the public as to why, for example, someone who led a home
invasion in the New Forest that resulted in the burning alive of
an entire family, although not until after the woman had been
repeatedly raped, should be considered for release at the end of
what is admittedly a long sentence. Most people would feel that
people forfeit their right to liberty when they commit offences
of that gravity. Where does punishment fit into all this?
I totally understand the point that my right hon. Friend makes.
In truth, parole is about risk and, rightly, public protection.
Either the tariff or the overall sentence should deal with the
element of punishment, rather than parole. Nevertheless, my right
hon. Friend makes an important point. He will know that whether
it was Harper’s law, Tony’s law or the wider reforms to
sentencing that we are making in the PCSC Bill, we have
strengthened sentencing, in the teeth of opposition from
Opposition Members.
In fairness, I do need to draw a distinction in respect of the
reforms I have set out: they are really about public protection
and the amorphous concept of risk in these cases. That itself
also goes to the issue of public confidence in relation to the
tariff and the punishment element that my right hon. Friend
mentioned. Both are important, but with parole we focus on risk.
I say that because I want to be clear that we are not adding
another sentence on top of a sentence. The question, from the
point at which an offender becomes eligible for parole, is
whether they satisfy the statutory criteria. Is it safe to
release them, or do they present an ongoing risk to public
protection? That is the core focus of the reforms I have
announced today, but I heed my right hon. Friend’s wider
point.
(Birmingham, Selly Oak)
(Lab)
I thank the Secretary of State for his statement and welcome the
broad thrust of his recommendations. I notice that the second
reform deals with the assessment of risk. The Secretary of
State’s proposal is to employ more people with a law and order
background, which I am quite happy to accept. I also notice that
the report by the charity Justice published in January this year
recommended:
“Enhancing the Parole Board’s programme of training to
include”—
among other things—
“critical analyses of offending behaviour programmes and risk
management tools”.
Does the Secretary of State have any plans to take that
recommendation on board?
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his constructive and reasonable
question. We will look at everything on training. The truth is
that the members of the Parole Board come with a vast depth of
experience; my question is whether we have the range right.
Psychiatrists and psychologists have a critical role to play, and
judges and lawyers inform the process, but if we say that our
overriding focus is public protection and we have finely balanced
questions of risk in relation to people who have committed a
so-called index offence many years previously, I would have
thought that, particularly for top-tier cases, the public would
want to know that the grizzled police officer, for example, who
has seen such cases before and knows the pattern of behaviour is
also there to provide that dimension of critical thinking.
The hon. Gentleman is right in what he says about critical
thinking. We need to make sure that the Parole Board panels,
particularly for the serious, top-tier cohort, have a broad
diversity of experience so that we can take a precautionary
approach and protect the public.
(Stroud) (Con)
I thank my right hon. Friend for his statement and continue to be
impressed by how he and the Ministry of Justice are gripping so
many complex justice matters all at once. This is about not only
public safety but the perception of public safety. The public
rightly care about law and order. I hear strong words from those
on the Opposition Front Bench, but we can see from the lack of
turnout among Labour MPs that they prefer to politick on this
issue rather than to do the hard graft of scrutiny.
On scrutiny, I really welcome that my right hon. Friend is
putting victims at the heart of Parole Board decisions and
allowing them input. Will he say a little more about how the
Parole Board has taken to those proposals? How can we support
victims as they go through that process? Some of them will find
those steps distressing even if they want to take them.
I thank my hon. Friend for her tenacity on these issues. She
makes the same point as the one my right hon. Friend the Member
for New Forest East (Dr Lewis) made about public confidence.
There is no escaping that, particularly if we think of the
history of parole and licence conditions and of how we ended up
with life terms after the abolition of the death penalty. The
public need to have confidence that sentences match the crime and
that their safety is of paramount importance.
My hon. Friend asked about how we will help victims through the
process; that is critical, because it must be gruelling and
traumatic for them. I know from the consideration that I have
given the matter and from the evidence I have seen how difficult
it will be. We have already made some improvements in the process
for victims: in 2018, we introduced written decision summaries to
improve transparency for victims; in 2019, we introduced the
reconsideration mechanism, which I exercised today; and in 2021,
we announced our intention to enable public hearings and for
victims to be able to attend them as observers, and we are now
giving them a much fuller role, as I explained in my statement.
On top of that, of course, is the statutory release test. When
the Parole Board considers that test, it will take clear account
of victims’ submissions and victims will be able to ask questions
through their submissions.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Lord Chancellor for the statement; I am encouraged by
the steps he has introduced today to address what one victim said
to me was a “reprehensible” parole system. That lady contacted me
after the murderer of her son was released and she saw him in the
local Tesco. She received no warning that he had been released
early. Will the Lord Chancellor confirm that the legislation will
include a legal obligation to inform victims and their close
family? Will he be in touch with the Minister in the Northern
Ireland Assembly to discuss the legislation proposed for this
place that can also be introduced in Northern Ireland?
The root and branch review will set out all the victims’ rights
in the process. The hon. Gentleman will be able to see that.
Copies are now available in the House. Of course we respect the
devolved settlements on this, but we are always willing to engage
with the devolved Administrations around cross-cutting issues and
those of common concern.
(Aylesbury) (Con)
The public will rightly expect that their protection is the
overriding concern when serious offenders are assessed either for
release by the Parole Board or, indeed, for transfer to an open
prison, a subject on which my right hon. Friend touched. I know
from my own time as non-executive director at Her Majesty’s
Prison and Probation Service that open prisons can be an
extremely important part of an offenders’ rehabilitation,
especially at the end of a very long sentence. We have seen
recent cases where the current test has clearly not worked
effectively. Does my right hon. Friend agree that time in an open
prison should always be regarded as a privilege, certainly never
an automatic right? Will he confirm that the measures that he has
already introduced, and that he is going on to introduce later
today, will result in a more cautious approach that will make
sure that the public is always safe?
I agree with everything that my hon. Friend said. I do not think
that there is a trade-off. In fact the two things go together: we
want to protect the public as well as identify those who can be
released into open conditions or into society—those who are ready
to play the right role, to reintegrate back into society, to
work, to look after their families and to stay clean of drugs.
All of those things go together. Ultimately, our objective is to
protect the public, drive down crime and reduce reoffending.
(Bishop Auckland)
(Con)
I thank my right hon. Friend for his statement and for engaging
with me over my one-punch awareness campaign, something about
which I am deeply passionate. Victim support is at the very heart
of that campaign, because, as we all know, the victims of crime
and their families do not stop suffering the moment the crime
stops being committed; they can suffer for months, years and even
the lifetime that follow. That is why the victims of crime need
to be at the very heart of our criminal justice system to ensure
that they receive the support, protection and reassurance they
need. Can my right hon. Friend confirm that these proposals will
improve victim support and public protection, particularly for
victims of the most serious crimes?
I pay tribute to my hon. Friend for her tenacious campaign and
say that I know how difficult that must be for her. None the
less, it is very important, and she brings a huge amount of
experience, particularly personal experience, to the Chamber and
to the changes that we are making. I agree with what she has
said. I have set out for the House the changes that we are making
for victims in relation to the parole decision-making process,
but they are only one element of a much broader strategy, and we
will, of course, be introducing a victims’ law. Again, I hope the
whole House can rally around that, so that victims feel that they
are front and centre of this, that they are listened to, that
they are taken into account, and that they are part of the
criminal justice system, not an appendix to it.
(Boston and Skegness)
(Con)
When Paul Robson escaped from the North Sea Camp open prison in
my constituency, the sudden presence of this violent rapist in
the community was deeply traumatic not just for his victims, but
for all those people who live in and around the area that the
prison occupies. By definition, although the Parole Board does
immensely difficult work, the fact that he absconded means that
he was in the wrong place. Will my right hon. Friend reassure me
that what he has announced today makes it far less likely for a
convict such as Paul Robson to be in those conditions and to
place the public at risk in the way that he did when he
absconded?
I can reassure my hon. Friend on that. The changes that we made
in December should give him some reassurance. There is no
risk-free approach here. What we do is try to create safeguards
to mitigate as best we can while maintaining a free society. I
also note that, under successive Conservative Governments, the
number of absconds has fallen, from 296 in 2009-10 to 101 in
2020-21—a third of the level. We have the security right, but we
will continue to make sure that we reinforce it.
(Wantage) (Con)
I warmly welcome my right hon. Friend’s statement today. Does he
agree that, in those most serious of cases, the public do not
expect politicians to throw up their hands and say, “Well, it was
a decision for the Parole Board”? They expect them, as the ones
accountable for keeping them safe, to step in and do so because
it is their No.1 job.
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. On that decision making, the
frustration is that if we delegate from this place or from
accountable Ministers, particularly when we are talking about
judgment calls, not things that require a purely technocratic or
scientific approach—psychiatry and psychology can only take us so
far—the public feel that we have abdicated our responsibility. We
are taking back control to provide a safeguard in those high-risk
cases, and that is exactly what the public already expect of
us.
(Peterborough) (Con)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend on his statement. We
sometimes forget that the most important reason for having
prisons is not necessarily as a punishment, but to keep the
public safe. I know that my constituents in Peterborough would
want the Parole Board always to be risk averse on public
protection when it comes to releasing criminals found guilty of
serious crimes. Can he reassure the good people of Peterborough
that he understands their concern and that public protection is
at the heart of these proposals?
My hon. Friend is right: public protection must be the overriding
priority. Moreover, it is important that the credibility of
measures such as open conditions and release on licence is
sustained as well. The rehabilitative work that we do—encouraging
offenders into work and getting off drugs—is critical to reducing
reoffending and also to protecting the public. The credibility
will be eroded if we do not make sure that we have the safeguards
right.
(Warrington South) (Con)
I welcome the Lord Chancellor’s statement. Last week, two
prisoners absconded from Thorn Cross prison in my constituency,
bringing the total to five so far in the first three months of
this year. Shane Farrington, as the Lord Chancellor has already
mentioned, was one of those who absconded. He was sentenced for
killing another prisoner and for escaping from custody in 2018.
Understandably, people living in Appleton Thorn in my
constituency are asking what he was doing in an open prison in
Warrington. Can the Lord Chancellor confirm that the changes
being announced today will prioritise the safety of people living
close to open prisons, and assure me that the Government’s
priority is to cut the number of absconds from open prisons, such
as the one in Warrington South?
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. Just before the Lord Chancellor answers that question, may
I say that, although I appreciate that the hon. Gentleman has
been waiting a long time to ask his question, he made a preamble
and then asked two questions. That is not what this is about.
Each person has the chance to ask one question. We do not need a
preamble. The preamble comes from the Minister who is making the
statement. We do not need all of that stated over and over again.
I am making this point now before we come to the next statement,
which I appreciate will be controversial. We will have short
questions and as short as possible answers. I appreciate that the
Minister has to give a full answer, but we do not need a
preamble. It is not a speech; it is a question.
Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker. I heed your advice, as always.
We have already cut the number of absconds by a third. Of course
the measures that I introduced in December—not the ones that I
have announced today—will further allow an extra safeguard,
which, I hope, will give my hon. Friend’s constituents some
reassurance.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I thank the Lord Chancellor for his thorough answers. We will now
move onto the next statement. I will pause to allow people to
enter and to leave the Chamber. I also remind hon. Members that,
after this item of business, we have six hours of very important
consideration of Lords amendments. That will take us well into
the evening.
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