Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Record numbers recalled to prison

 According to the latest figures released by the Ministry of Justice, more than 5,000 people were recalled to prison in December 2025 alone, which is over one-third of the total number recalled in the year to June 2025. Between July and September 2025, there were 12,836 people recalled, which is 29 per cent higher than the equivalent number for the same period in 2024.


The early release scheme SDS40 (Standard Determinate Sentence 40), under which 50,000 prisoners were released in England and Wales, is said to likely be responsible for this increase, due to the lack of preparedness for individuals to be freed. This includes lack of accommodation and shortage of probation staff to deal with them. Mark Fairhurst of the Prison Officers Association says his members believe that many prisoners want to be returned to jail so they can carry in illegal drugs to trade within the prison system.


Between July and September 2025, over 19,000 new arrivals entered prison, and there were only 14,000 releases, which is why the early release scheme was deemed essential. Probation is now dealing with over 246,500 people, which is an increase of 2 per cent from the position 12 months ago.


Meanwhile there has been a reduction of 7 per cent in the number of recalls for those on licence under IPP (Imprisonment for Public Protection) sentences, and a significant increase in out of court dispersals, which provide an alternative to prison sentences.

James Timpson: ‘I can see the positive in people where others maybe can’t’

 On a stroll around Styal jail in Cheshire, the prisons minister discusses jobs for ex-offenders, support for women inmates and why he has no political ambitions

hen he was a boy, the prisons minister James Timpson spent hours waiting outside Styal prison while his mother visited the women inside. “My parents were foster parents and quite a large number of the children came to us because their mother was in prison here,” he says, as we arrive at the jail. “My mum used to bring them in once or twice a week to see their mum to keep that connection going.” He and his siblings, Victoria and Edward, would stay in the car. “We used to sit there and fight, and listen to Abba on the cassette player. I remember being intrigued by what happened beyond the big wall.”


He would wonder about the “really bad things” the prisoners must have done. “I think we were too young to really understand,” he says. “My mum would explain that she was helping children and helping to keep families together. It was just part of life.” Over 30 years, the Timpsons took in more than 90 neglected and traumatised young people. “We had to share everything,” the minister says. “The foster children used to turn up in the middle of the night so we’d wake up in the morning and new people would be having breakfast wearing our clothes.” He never resented it. “That’s not my personality. It was brilliant, chaotic, probably a bit eccentric but it was normal to us.”


Timpson became fascinated by the criminal justice system and passionate about turning prisons from places of retribution to engines of rehabilitation. When he took over his family’s key-cutting and shoe-repair business, he made a point of hiring ex-offenders to give them a “second chance”. His condition for accepting the role of prisons minister in Keir Starmer’s government after the 2024 general election was that the words “reducing reoffending” should be added to his title. “That’s got to be the purpose of the job.”


Our walk will take us around Styal prison and then out through the gates and across the Cheshire countryside towards Quarry Bank Mill. Timpson often comes to the jail, which is near his Wilmslow home, and it always reminds him of his childhood visits. “The buildings are the same, but it’s 40 years on and similar problems still exist,” he says. “There are lots of women here who are stuck in a cycle of criminality and find it very difficult to get out of it.” As the minister parks his car, a woman knocks on the window and asks if he has a light. He tells her he hasn’t. As she walks on, he says: “She’s just been released. The question is, has she got anywhere to live?” We pass through several gates and enter the jail. This is a closed prison so security is tight and there are lots of clanging doors, but Styal also has green spaces, tree-lined avenues and well-tended gardens that make it feel more like a village than a prison. With its clock tower, Edwardian-style cottages and duck pond, it reminds me of Trumpton, the sleepy rural town in the 1970s children’s television show. Last time Timpson visited there were seven prisoners protesting up a tree. Today several are sitting in the sunshine outside the residential blocks. 


Timpson wants to close at least one women’s jail. “Women’s prisons are full of women who are not very well,” he says. “A lot of the women are there because of relationships with men where they’ve been abused and beaten up. The brain damage that they’ve had often can lead to poor decision-making.” About 80% of the women arriving at Styal are addicted to alcohol or drugs and a similar proportion have mental health problems, although there is crossover between the two groups. Self-harm is rife. One prisoner bangs her head so hard against the wall of her cell that she repeatedly ends up in hospital. The minister still finds it shocking to see women “bandaged up” to cover the wounds. “Even when they’ve got through this and they’re working, the scars never go.” 


More than half of women in prison have children. At Styal, two are pregnant and there are three mothers with newborns. “It’s the impact on the kids that I always think about here,” Timpson says. “Around a quarter of people in prison have been in the care system so you’re basically already pre-describing the life of so many people because their parents have been in the prison system.”The government has commissioned an independent investigation by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman to examine whether restraints have been used appropriately during pregnancy, after reports of prisoners being shackled in labour. Timpson says women should never be giving birth in handcuffs. “I am a husband and a father and when a child is born it is not just about the child, it’s about the experience of the mother too. It’s a traumatic period and it’s just not right.” 


We cross a courtyard, through two more sets of gates, and go onto the induction wing of the prison. A group of recent arrivals are sitting on sofas, chatting. One woman tells Timpson that she is on her 25th sentence for shoplifting because she keeps being released with nowhere to live. The other women in Styal are the closest thing she has to family, she says. Michael Howard famously said that “prison works”, but Timpson insists that jails are failing society if they do not make their inmates less likely to commit more crimes after they are released. “Eighty per cent of offending is reoffending,” he says. “We’ve got to get better at helping people not go back into the system. Probation is where the heavy lifting of the justice system is done. There are 90,000 people in prison in England and Wales and a quarter of a million people in the hands of probation.”


Before he went into government, Timpson told me that Britain was “addicted” to punishment and that jails were predominantly full of “broken” people. A third of prisoners should not be there at all, he said, and another third should be receiving treatment. As a minister, he is more circumspect but he makes a similar point. “My view is that if we can help address people’s addiction, mental health and trauma, they are far less likely to go out and commit further offences and come back in. And that’s what’s got to be the focus, especially with women. I genuinely believe most of the women here are victims.” 


In the library, prisoners are doing jigsaw puzzles and reading books. “Too many times I go past classrooms and they’re not full,” Timpson says. “It’s not just about education, it’s about giving people skills for a job on release.”


‘If we help address people’s addiction, mental health and trauma, they are far less likely to go out and commit further offences and come back in’

Styal has a Marston’s Academy, sponsored by the brewery, including a pub (serving non-alcoholic drinks) and a kitchen where prisoners are busy making pizzas. “When I first started recruiting people from prisons like Styal, I was basically the only person coming,” Timpson says. “Now it’s a competitive business. We had over 300 employers last year knocking on our door wanting to employ people in prison. We’ve got to the stage where in some prisons we probably have more employers than we’ve got people wanting to be taken on.” He thinks public perception has changed and that businesses are catching up. “They’ve worked out they can find some really good people who work hard and are loyal.”We stroll past the wildflower meadow and sit on a bench in the prison’s “reflection garden”. Timpson says he and his wife, Roisin, who runs the hospitality wing of the family firm, have always wanted to help “people who have had a difficult time”. Soon after he took over as chief executive of Timpson in 2002, they were invited to a local jail. “Matthew, the 19-year-old lad who was showing us around, had the right personality. He was fun, interesting, engaging but he couldn’t get a job because he’d got a criminal record for fighting.” Timpson took him on. “He’s still working for the business. He’s married with two kids and he’s doing really well. He’s a manager now.”Now around one in nine of the people working in his company are former prisoners. Timpson says they are some of his best employees. “They are more ‘sticky’ because we’ve given them a second chance.” He wants the civil service to hire more ex-offenders. “The best policy comes from people who’ve been through it,” he says. “I just love giving people an opportunity. I can see the positive in people where others maybe can’t . Sometimes I get it wrong but I’m an eternal optimist and I like fixing things.”


There is a lot that needs fixing at the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). Timpson inherited a prison system in crisis with violent, overcrowded jails keeping inmates locked up for 23 hours a day. Arriving in Whitehall was, he admits, a “traumatic” experience for a businessman. Within days of his appointment, he was told that the prisons were about to run out of space and he had to sign off an emergency release scheme. “We got down to less than 100 spare cells one night, which is really dangerous.” 


Since then the government has introduced changes to sentencing laws that will reduce the number of people in jail for less than a year and increase the use of community punishments and electronic tagging. Prisoners will be able to earn early release through good behaviour. Timpson insists the system is starting to turn around. “There are green shoots everywhere. Over 80% of our prisons are performing better than when they were previously inspected. There are a few areas that still haven’t responded to the medicine yet - drones and drugs are still a big concern… but the momentum is there.” 


Huge problems remain, however. Last month, the government was forced to admit that 179 prisoners had been released “in error” between April 2025 and March 2026. Timpson insists his department is getting a grip on the issue. “It’s a result of a lack of investment in technology. The fact is you can never guarantee that any system will be 100% correct. You’re going to have mistakes. But if you go into an offender management unit, you will see piles and piles of boxes of paperwork… The number of releases in error has come down dramatically since we put more checks and balances in place but what it needs is a fundamental digitisation of the system.” We leave the prison and set off towards the mill. The sound of cows mooing mingles with the noise of traffic. As a businessman, Timpson championed the importance of “ethical capitalism”. He appointed a director of happiness for his firm and instituted what he called a Happy Index to rate employees’ wellbeing. “It was all about measuring colleagues’ happiness because the happier they are, the more profit the company makes,” he says. “That doesn’t mean you’re a softie or a pushover, it means you treat every individual in the way you would like to be treated yourself.”He has tried to institute a similar culture at the MoJ but the prime minister has been criticised for throwing civil servants and aides under the bus. What advice would Timpson give to Starmer about leadership? “I’m not a political person,” he replies. “It’s not my job to give advice to the prime minister but all I can say from what I’ve learned is that there is a huge amount of potential for us to improve the way we deliver public services.” The secret of success for a leader is, he says, “to surround yourself with talented people, let them get on with it, trust them, but also make sure that when things aren’t going right, you come up with a plan”.


We turn down a quiet country lane lined with high hawthorn hedges. Timpson says there is so much the public sector could learn from the corporate world. “There are too many rules and guidelines that mean the system doesn’t allow people to make quick, instinctive decisions.” He is baffled by government reshuffles. “In business you want the aces in the right places, the people who are really passionate about their subject, but you don’t do one day where everything changes.”


Since 2010, there have been 15 prisons ministers. Timpson is already the fifth longest-serving holder of the post in 20 years. As we arrive at Quarry Bank, he admits he is unusual – perhaps unique – at Westminster because he has absolutely no political ambition or desire to be prime minister. “I’m one of the few people who actually wants to be prisons minister and doesn’t want to do anything else,” he says. “It’s been a real privilege to be offered this job but when I finish I’m going back to run my family business.”

Following Dame Lynne Owens’ Independent Review, the Justice Secretary has pledged £82 million to address the growing problem of prisoners released in error.

 How are prisoners released from prison?

HM Prison and Probation Service’s (HMPPS) Prison discharge policy sets out the rules and guidance that prison staff must follow when a prisoner is being discharged (released) from prison at the end of their sentence.


To ensure that it is “correct to discharge the prisoner”, prison staff are required to, among other things, check:


the prisoner’s identity by checking their name, date of birth, signature, photograph, tattoos and scars, and biometric data,

that HMPPS has received the documents giving the releasing authority of the Parole Board or the Justice Secretary,

that the prisoner is not subject to an outstanding recall from a previous sentence,

that there are no deportation orders, and

that there are no other reasons to keep a prisoner in custody.

How common are releases in error?

A prisoner is released in error if they are “released when they should otherwise have remained in HMPPS custody and the prisoner or a third party has not deliberately played a part in the error.”


In the year ending March 2026, 179 prisoners were released in error from prisons and courts in England and Wales.


This was a 31% decrease on the 262 prisoners who were released in error in the year ending March 2025. The number of prisoners who were released in error in the year ending March 2025 was the highest number on record and a 128% increase on those released in error in the year ending March 2024.


Data on the number of prisoners correctly released from prison in the year ending March 2026 has not yet been released. However, the number of prisoners released in error in the year ending March 2026 was equivalent to 0.31% of the 57,000 prisoners correctly released from prison in the year ending March 2025.


Some prisoners released in error have attracted public attention, including:


the release in error of Hadush Kebata in October 2025, an asylum seeker who was serving a 12-month prison sentence for sexual assault. He was apprehended by the police 48 hours later and was deported,

the release in error of Billy Smith in November 2025, who was serving a 45-month prison sentence for multiple fraud offences. He handed himself in to the police three days later and was returned to prison, and

the release in error of Brahim Kaddour-Cherif in November 2025, a sex offender who was in custody awaiting trial for burglary. He was apprehended by the police nine days later and was returned to prison.

The Prison Governors’ Association has stated that releases in error are “neither rare nor hidden” and “have occurred under every government’s watch.” (PDF) However, releases in error increased significantly between 2022/23 and 2025/26.

is moving swiftly to strengthen training, support and oversight for frontline staff. But lasting progress will depend on whether prisons are given sufficient, experienced staff with the time, tools and confidence to calculate sentences accurately. New systems and simpler rules will help, but unless staffing pressures are resolved, the system will remain vulnerable to further errors in future.


The chair of the Prison Officers’ Association, Mark Fairhurst, has called the government’s response to Dame Lynne’s investigation “welcome, much needed reforms” but warned that “you’re never going to totally eradicate human error.”


The chief executive of the social justice charity Nacro, Enver Solomon, has said that while the government’s plan to upgrade technology in prisons was welcome, that further changes would also be needed:


There is no getting away from the fact that the prison system remains in a serious crisis so unless there are sustained improvements in not just technology but also training, ways of working and organisational culture, lasting change will not be possible and there will continue to be too many failures. Systemic reform must be a clear priority to prevent more releases in error.


The chief executive officer of the charity Victim Support, Katie Kempen, stated that Dame Lynne Owens’ independent review had highlighted how “flawed the system for calculating release dates is” and how “victims are left suffering the retraumatising effects of a criminal justice system on its knees.”


The general secretary of the Criminal Justice Workers Union, Mike Rolfe, has called the new prisoner release checks “another layer of bureaucracy that doesn’t actually solve the problem” and has urged the government to focus on “why people don’t want to work in prisons anymore and why the service is falling apart”.


The Prison Governors’ Association has stated that the government needs to “focus attention on the wider and worsening conditions across our prison estate” (PDF):


Our members […] continue to do their utmost to keep the prison system afloat. At times, it feels like this is against all odds and despite the limited contribution from successive governments to properly enable and resource the service the public rightly expects.


Our commitment remains clear: we will work with any political party or government willing to find meaningful solutions to improve conditions in our prisons. […] But while political parties showboat and grandstand, the real risk to the public is not being effectively managed.

More activities for prisoners will reduce drug use, says head of Prison Service

 The head of the Prison Service in England and Wales has told MPs that offering prisoners more activities and more time out of their cells will help to tackle the problem of drugs in jails.


James McEwan, Chief Executive of HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS), said a recent fall in the prison population – down more than 2,000 since the Sentencing Act 2026 began to take effect – would help governors to run more consistent regimes allowing more worthwhile activities to take place.


Mr McEwan was answering questions from the all-party Justice Select Committee about the state of prisons at an evidence session on 28 April. He was asked by Warinder Juss, Labour MP for Wolverhampton West, what prisons were doing to combat the boredom which encourages people in prison to turn to drugs for relief.


Mr McEwan replied: “Every year we work with governors on regime plans for the year ahead to set out some of their aspirations for their establishments. We’ve particularly focused this year on safety and security, as you would expect, but safety and security is driven in lots of ways – including making sure there is good purposeful activities, good time out of room, enrichment activities available.”


He said some jails saw a “downward spiral” where drug high rates of drug use led to prisoners being taken to hospital, meaning staff are needed to escort them, or prisoners engaging in violence linked to drug debts, leading to officers going off sick through injury. The resulting staff shortages meant prisoners spending more time in their cells, fuelling the problem of boredom.


Mr McEwan added: “As we take heat out of the prison system through the measures we’re taking in the Sentencing Act, one of the opportunities we have is try and have more consistent regime so we’re really clear with prisoners – this is what we’re going to deliver, this is what you can expect from the regime, and that we’ve got have much more confidence that we can do that. So trying to get out of that negative spiral and have a much more positive experience.”


Addressing the causes of drug use in prisons, Mr McEwan said: “Boredom is a factor for sure, but also debt and extortion, people bringing in addiction issues they’ve got in the community, all play a part.” Sitting alongside him as he answered MPs’ questions was Dr Jo Farrar, Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Justice.


Over a six-week period in March and April, the prison population declined by 2,047 to a new 15-month low, driven by a change introduced as part of the Sentencing Act 2026. 


Under the Act, many prisoners serving sentences of four years or longer who had previously been handed a ‘standard recall’ – meaning they might stay in custody until the end of their sentence – saw this converted into a ‘fixed-term recall’ of just 56 days custody. Those who had already spent more than 56 days on recall became eligible for immediate release.


In a report on drugs in prisons published in October 2025, the Justice Select Committee said that bored prisoners are more likely to use drugs, and called for a wider range of activities to be offered. One of the report’s recommendations stated: “The MoJ must expand access to purposeful activities, including education, vocational training, accredited work programmes and constructive recreational opportunities to prevent prisoners turning to drugs as a result of boredom.”

Highest number of people jailed since 2017, courts figures show

 Courts in England and Wales sent 88,100 people to prison in 2025 – marking a 9 per cent increase on the previous year, and the biggest annual total since 2017.


Figures published by the Ministry of Justice on 30 April showed that overall, 1.2 million people were sentenced during 2025. As in previous years, around three-quarters received a fine. There was also an increase in the number of community resolutions that did not lead to prison, from just under 164,000 to 181,700, which is therefore up 11 per cent.


Prosecutions rose by 9 per cent. Police increased the number of cautions issued as an alternative to taking people to court, but there was an increase of 18 per cent in charges for sex offences, whilst public order and drug charges also increased. 


Whilst Magistrates courts remanded more people in custody than in the previous year, the courts reduced remands in custody overall, with 54 per cent of Crown Court defendants remanded in custody and 45 per cent given bail.

19 self-inflicted deaths within 48 hours of arriving in prison

 A watchdog’s investigation uncovered 19 cases where people suffered self-inflicted deaths within 48 hours of arriving at a reception prison.


The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman (PPO), Adrian Usher, released the data as he called on jails to pay more attention to newly-arrived prisoners. He said: “I am truly shocked and saddened by these figures.”


The PPO, who investigates every death in custody in England and Wales, reviewed 170 cases of self-inflicted deaths in reception prisons over a five-year period. As well as the 19 (11 per cent) which happened within the first two days, a further 51 (30 per cent) occurred between three days and one month after arrival.


Mr Usher concluded that during these early days after arrival there is a lack of communication between staff and new residents. He says that poor use of the suicide and self-harm prevention process, known as ACCT (Assessment, Care in Custody and Teamwork), is common, and that individual risk assessments are not carried out thoroughly, if at all. 


Other failings identified by the PPO included poor management of court appearances, and underestimation of the impact of these on the mental well-being of those attending, whether in person or by video link.


Key worker schemes are vital, the PPO reports, but are too often lacking. Mr Usher calls for accredited staff training, saying: “This must be repeated regularly to ensure staff for this prison group have been properly trained. Staff must have appropriate skills to identify and support those at high risk.”


He added that 77 per cent of the individuals who died had mental health issues, warning: “It is evident that prisons should have robust early day processes to account for this crucial period

Wormwood Scrubs and Pentonville are now safer, say inspectors

 When HM Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP) visited Wormwood Scrubs and Pentonville in 2025, it issued scathing verdicts. Inspectors went back to the two London jails this year to assess progress in putting right the faults, and have published latest findings.


Charlie Taylor, the Chief Inspector of Prisons, said the Scrubs had focussed on safety and made considerable strides. He praised the prison’s success in stemming the spread of illegal drugs in the jail and said that drug testing was demonstrating that this new approach was working. He particularly praised the Incentivised Substance-Free Living unit. He also added that the use of body-worn cameras had improved and more incidents were properly recorded, but that use of force was unacceptably inconsistent.


However, time out of cell and purposeful activities were still unacceptable. The policy restricting mixing between wings had not changed, and caused tensions and unhappiness among residents. The regime, he says, remains poor, with around 40 per cent of prisoners locked up during the working day. Living conditions in the prison had improved, but progress to upgrade the vital emergency cell call system was slow. 


Supervision of medication had improved. Despite better support from housing providers, homelessness on release had increased instead of reducing, and plans to help those released early were still in development.


At Pentonville, inspectors who went back in March found that prison leaders had taken their previous report seriously. HMIP found good progress in leadership, early days, and sentence management, with reasonable progress in improving prisoner safety and staff/prisoner relationships.


Reception and first night processes were better organised and supervised, and quality assurance checks had improved leadership control of sentence management. However, time out of cell had not increased at all sufficiently. Despite a new core day system, too many men remain locked up for long periods.


Suicide and self-harm prevention processes were inconsistently applied. Far too many men had no activities to attend, and attendance at classes was inconsistently recorded. Inspectors noted the recently-opened training kitchens and found that working with third-sector organisations both provided new opportunities and improved the environment.


HMIP felt that the Governor has clearer direction and stronger oversight of critical systems, and detected clear improvements where the prison leadership team had focussed their attention. Warnings were given that this will not be maintained unless time out of cell is more consistent and more people participate in the activities on offer.

CON 'AFFAIR' Glam prison officer, 30, accused of ‘inappropriate relationship’ with lag at jail after volunteering with rehab

 A GLAM prison officer accused of having an “inappropriate relationship” with a male lag at HMP Belmarsh has appeared in the dock.


Michelle Molver, 30, is charged with misconduct in public office at the category A men’s prison between August 1 and September 5, last year.

She is alleged to have had an “inappropriate relationship” with inmate Kemai Mathurine while working at the top-security jail in south east London.


Molver today appeared at Bromley Magistrates’ Court dressed in a black leather jacket, black leggings and Dr Martens boots.


In the short hearing she spoke only to confirm her name, age and new address.


No specific details of the alleged relationship with Mathurine were heard during today’s appearance in court.

Molver was granted bail and is due to appear at Woolwich Magistrates’ Court on June 8.


The 30-year-old is the former director of the now dissolved Road to Rehabilitation Ltd and is currently listed as a director of Grass Root Homes Ltd.

Molver has also been involved with The Churchill Fellowship, which focuses on rehabilitation projects linked to prisoners and reducing reoffending.


In an online profile Molver states: “My role is to support prisoners into employment on release and ultimately to reduce their likelihood of reoffending.


“The criminal justice system in the UK is at breaking point, with prison populations at an all-time high, and this has a ripple effect impacting services well beyond the justice sector.”


She also wrote that her fellowship project looked at ways to cut reoffending in UK prisons by studying practices used in countries including Norway and Switzerland.


HMP Belmarsh is a Category A men’s prison which houses high-profile offenders, including inmates considered national security risks.


Tutor jailed for having relationship with inmate

 A prison tutor jailed for 12 months for having an intimate relationship with an inmate was guilty of a "foolish infatuation", a judge has said.


Kelly Duffey, of Amesbury in Wiltshire, was sentenced at Winchester Crown Court earlier over two charges of misconduct in a public office in connection with the affair with Ashley Goodridge, an inmate at HMP Erlestoke.


The 36-year-old had previously admitted having the relationship, which included a "sexual encounter", at a court hearing in February.


Goodridge, who is 38 and in jail for cannabis production, had his current prison sentence extended by 12 months after pleading guilty to having a phone and using it to send a photo to her.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Drugs and overcrowding still significant at prison

 The number of men taking their own lives, the use of drugs and overcrowding remain significant problems at HMP Leeds, a report has found.


The Category B prison, which houses almost 1,000 inmates, was last year found to have the highest number of self-inflicted deaths in all adult male prisons in the UK.


HM Inspectorate of Prisons visited in March to follow up on concerns raised in 2025, and said leaders had taken those "seriously" but efforts to improve were hampered by "severe overcrowding, high rates of drug use, self-inflicted deaths and lack of time out of cell for many men".


HM Prison Service said it was investing in improving security and strengthening support to reduce self-harm.


The report said a new governor took up post six months before the latest review and brought "drive and determination through her proactive leadership style."


But it said too many prisoners were still developing a substance misuse problem while in the prison and there was "little evidence that use of illicit drugs had reduced".


"Leaders told us some men were being paid to get recalled and bring drugs into the jail," it said.


"Security at the main gate had weaknesses that needed addressing."

The report said many men were still not spending enough time out of their cells and most "shared overcrowded and cramped cells designed for one".


"Many had little time out of cell, because the regime was frequently curtailed and access to education, work and other activities was limited," the inspection in July 2025 found.


The report said this remained a problem.


Since the previous inspection, the report said, another three men had taken their own lives and there were three serious self-harm incidents where the prisoner had to be resuscitated.

However, it said, some aspects had improved since the July inspection, notably that concerns were better shared between the prison, healthcare providers and the NHS concerning "acutely mentally unwell men".


Support for prisoners returning to the community was also improving, it said, and while nearly 200 men were still remanded and recalled each month, the concern that they were not getting enough practical support had been addressed by the prison redeploying resources and planning a residential unit to improve their access to agencies.


This response was "impressive and "better than we usually see", the report said.


Staff-prisoner relationships and cleanliness had also improved, and there was "significant" and "reasonable" progress in education, skills and work, with significant support in place for prisoners with special educational needs and disabilities.


A Prison Service spokesperson said: "We welcome the inspectors' recognition of improvements in the support for new arrivals.


"However, the prison is still operating under immense pressure.


"That is why we are already taking urgent action to tackle the spread of drugs by investing over £40m in new prison security nationally and reduce self-harm by strengthening support for prisoners who may be at risk."

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

IMB Chair suspended over ‘conduct’

 The head of an Independent Monitoring Board (IMB) which criticised the way a prison was run has been suspended from her post because she upset the Governor.


Emma Wilson, IMB Chair at Downview women’s prison, was told by the Ministry of Justice in December that she was being suspended due to her “conduct towards members of staff at the prison”. She was told that the allegations would be investigated by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman, and that if upheld they could “give rise to grounds for term-


inating your appointment”.


The decision to suspend Ms Wilson came after Amy Dixon, the Governor of Downview, complained to national IMB officials that Ms Wilson had shown “hostility” and “disrespect” towards herself and two other senior managers, and that her behaviour amounted to “bullying”. Ms Dixon said her encounters with Ms Wilson had caused her “worry” and “distress”.


It is the second time Ms Wilson has been removed from her watchdog post. In September 2025, the day after the Downview IMB published its annual report containing strong criticisms of the prison and the MoJ, Prisons Minister Lord Timpson told her that he had decided to terminate her appointment to the IMB. The reason given was an alleged conflict of interest with her role as a trustee of the Prison Reform Trust. The decision prompted six other members of the Downview IMB to quit in protest.


Ms Wilson was reinstated as IMB Chair on 21 November 2025, with Lord Timpson eventually admitting there had been “administrative flaws” in the process which IMB national officials followed. 


However, her return angered Downview’s management, and nine days later the Governor submitted her complaint – backed up by statements from the two other managers. One of the statements said: “I now feel sick at the prospect of Emma Wilson returning to Down-view.” Within weeks, Ms Wilson had been suspended.


Ms Wilson said: “It’s an alarming precedent that prison governors who find it stressful to be monitored can so easily put in a complaint against a monitor, which then leads to their suspension. I was surprised to see so little evidence against me in the complaint. It fundamentally undermines the independence of our role if we can be suspended so easily. 


“Lord Timpson has formally acknowledged that the IMB Secretariat’s management of the process was flawed for my alleged conflict of interest, so I really don’t have any confidence in the IMB Secretariat being able to manage a complaints process properly.” 


Asked whether Ms Wilson’s suspension could deter other IMBs from criticising prison management, a national IMB spokesperson said: “We would not comment publicly on any matter relating to an individual member.” The MoJ also declined to comment.

Ministry of Justice admits to asking AI for policy ideas

 The Government department in charge of prisons has admitted to using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to “brainstorm ideas” for new policies.


Asked in the House of Commons whether the Ministry of Justice uses AI for policy-making, Justice Minister Jake Richards said: “The MoJ has rolled out general purpose AI tools like Microsoft Copilot across the department to enhance productivity and support the work of all staff, including policy professionals. 


“AI is being used to assist the policy-making process with tasks like brainstorming ideas, clarifying drafting, and searching for publicly-available information. The Department encourages officials to always cross-validate the outputs of AI rather than blindly trusting them, applying human judgement and oversight as appropriate.”


His statement on 20 April came in response to a question from Conservative MP John Hayes, who had asked Justice Secretary David Lammy whether the MoJ “has used artificial intelligence to assist with drafting legislation and policy in the past 12 months”.


Mr Richards is thought to be the first UK Government minister to admit to using AI in policy-making. Business Secretary Peter Kyle has said he uses it for background research.


Even Science Secretary Liz Kendall, the Cabinet minister in charge of policy on AI, has said she does not use it for Government business – only in her personal life. In a BBC interview last month, she said the last time she had used it was to find out which face cream ingredient she was allergic to.

Idaho’s new firing squad prepares to fire

 After years of controversy surrounding lethal injections, the western US state looks to automate the process of shooting people sentenced to death


Come July, a new Idaho law will require the state to prioritise use of the firing squad when performing executions. It will become the first state in the country to make shooting prisoners condemned to death its method of choice, followed by lethal injection.


Idaho’s turn to the firing squad follows years of controversy surrounding its procurement of lethal injection chemicals and its failed 2024 execution of Thomas Creech. Creech’s execution was called off when a medical team repeatedly failed to establish the intravenous line needed to deliver the injection.


In an interview with a Prison Journalism Project (PJP) editor, Ryan Mortensen, a spokesperson for the Idaho Department of Correction (IDOC) said the department is evaluating options to “procure a remotely operated system” — an effort intended to reduce staff involvement in the gruesome process. 


“It is a traumatic thing to experience,” Mortensen said. “The number one priority is safety and security for all involved.”


IDOC is currently reviewing how other states have implemented firing squad executions. If a remote option is not obtained, Mortensen said, “a manual process will remain necessary as a back-up”.


A corrections officer, who asked to remain anonymous, said he heard the eventual weapon would likely be placed on a stand and “operated by a computer to release a firing pattern”.


“It’s kind of like Call of Duty,” the officer added.


Today, only four other states are legally authorised to use the firing squad for executions. The method is rarely used. Last year, South Carolina became the first state in 15 years to execute a prisoner by firing squad when three volunteer prison employees shot rifles at a red bull’s eye over the heart of Brad Keith Sigmon. Sigmon chose the method over lethal injection.


Idaho’s death chamber is located at the Idaho Maximum Security Institution, in a cellblock adjacent to the track and ball field at Idaho State Correctional Institution, where I’m incarcerated. The sound of gunfire from a nearby firing range regularly echoes throughout the compound.

The range is being used for routine training by local law enforcement, including the IDOC, said Mortensen. 


The occasional small eruptions are eerie. 


“It’s as close to full-auto as you can get,” Mark Hopson said of the sound. (Mortensen said that IDOC personnel do not train with automatic weapons.)


In addition to South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Utah have also kept the firing squad on the books. But Idaho is the only state set to prioritise it over other execution methods. South Carolina killed a total of three prisoners by firing squad last year. Prior to that, Utah was the only state in nearly 50 years to deploy its firing squad, for a total of three times. 


The view from around the compound


Following Creech’s failed execution, I remember watching a press conference, with corrections officials and media witnesses, live from my unit. 


“Why have a punishment that’s more or less for theatrics?” prisoner Jason Stark said during a recent interview in the dayroom. “This is a question of ethics and humanity. Not on the part of the person dying but on the people supporting the system. If taking a life is so horrible, then why are they doing it?” 


When asked about use of the firing squad, Stark ranked its perceived humaneness among other methods. 


“Lethal injection is better than firing squad,” he said. “Both of those are better than hanging, and better than the electric chair. But really, the most peaceful way to die is by nitrogen asphyxiation.” 


Experts tend to disagree. Even some veterinarians oppose the use of nitrogen asphyxiation to euthanize animals because of its uncertain effects, according to a report from the American Civil Liberties Union.


In line for breakfast, Frank Nicolai, who is 22 years into a sentence of life without parole, told me he’s not a proponent of the death penalty. “But I do believe that people serving fixed-life sentences should be given the option of euthanasia,” he said. 


Last year, the Idaho Statesman reported that the state spent $200,000 (£150,000) on execution drugs that expired after going unused.


“I personally think they should just take them out to the courtyard and use a cattle knocker,” Robert Sanders said between mouthfuls of biscuits and gravy. A cattle knocker is a pneumatic device that is applied to the cranium of cattle during slaughter. “Do away with all of the commotion and save the taxpayers money.” 


RJ McKinney spent 28 years on death row. He is the closest thing to an expert on the subject that I could find. I caught him walking back from a volunteer shift.


“Killing me isn’t a punishment,” he said. “That’s just getting rid of me. If you really want to punish me, keep me around for the rest of my life and let me think on what I’ve done.”

Friday, 1 May 2026

no news

 Still no update on my parol. 
i had a video link with New Connections (not the dating site), this is a charity that helps people with long term sentances such as myself, and it all went well. i will keep yopu updated after my next video link which is on the 11th