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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 >> Boylan, R (on the application of) v The Parole Board [2012] EWHC 1233 (Admin) (10 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/1233.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1233 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Leeds Combined 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 BOYLAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE PAROLE BOARD |
Defendant |
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Mr Slater (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
HER HONOUR JUDGE BELCHER:
"58. Thus the recognition that fairness is a question of law has two implications which may be in tension with one another. It means first and foremost that whether a step or decision was unfair is an appellate question, not a review question, and so is not to be approached by simply asking whether it went outside a broad band of discretion. In fact I question whether discretion is the correct word for most such decisions: they are, or ought to be, exercises of judgment."
"Secondly, however, many such decisions turn on facts which it was for the tribunal to ascertain and to evaluate. If and insofar as such findings are recorded by the lower tribunal, they will be the basis on which the appellate court gauges the fairness of what the tribunal decided to do."
Therefore I have to consider whether the decision that an oral hearing was unnecessary was unfair in all the circumstances. That is a primary decision for me to make, exercising my judgment based upon the facts and findings before the Parole Board at the time that decision was made.
"However, the panel has to take into account your extensive history of offending which has included many offences of violence against the person. As a consequence you are assessed as posing a high risk of causing serious harm and the risk management plan reflects this by proposing stringent conditions to manage the risk."
It then goes on as follows:
"If re-released now you would be on licence until 2017. Your offending history indicates that you have offended regularly since 1971 and there have been no discernible breaks in the pattern, aside from when you have been in custody. You have certainly not been able to remain offence free for anything like the period that you would be on licence. It may be that you have turned a corner and that you are motivated to lead a law abiding life. However, in the view of the panel, particularly given the circumstances of your recall which indicated continuing poor consequential thinking skills, work to address cognitive deficits should be undertaken in closed conditions. This will give you further skills to use to avoid reoffending. At the current time, for these reasons, the panel made no recommendation as to release."
"However, I note that although the Recall Panel balanced the positive evidence against the negative evidence in the dossier, there was no explicit reference to the potential benefit of your re-release or how this was assessed in relation to your assessed risks. Therefore, in the interests of fairness, I recommend to the Ministry of Justice that your case should be considered for a further paper review."
"The Claimant's positive custodial behaviour and expressed commitment to change could be taken to indicate that the risk he poses may not be what it once was. The paper panel on 20th July acknowledge the possibility that the Claimant had turned a corner. The Defendant submits that the Claimant has attached undue weight to that comment but there is no avoiding that it was said and that it is highly relevant. Certainly the panel took other matters into account, including the possibility of the Claimant undertaking risk-reduction work in custody, but the fact remains that if the Claimant has turned a corner then he would have a reasonable argument that he should be released without the need for him to complete that work. The only way of fairly determining whether in fact he had turned a corner would, as his solicitors submitted at the time, be by exposing him to questioning at an oral hearing."
In other words, the Claimant's case is that the question in issue is whether or not he had in fact turned a corner. That, they submit, can only be fairly resolved by questioning the Claimant himself at an oral hearing.
"Properly construed in context, the phrase means 'It may be, as your representations maintain, that you have changed; however, we take the view, particularly given the circumstances of your recall, that you have not."
"It may be that you have turned a corner and that you are motivated to lead a law abiding life. However, in the view of the panel, particularly given the circumstances of your recall which indicated continuing poor consequential thinking skills, work to address cognitive deficits should be undertaken in closed conditions."
In other words, in my judgment, giving the Claimant the benefit of any doubt there might have be and accepting that he may very well have turned a corner and be motivated to lead a law-abiding life, nevertheless, the Parole Board took the view that the circumstances of the recall, and of course implicit in that the breach of licence, indicate continuing poor consequential thinking skills and the need to address those by offending related work undertaken in closed conditions.
"It may be you have turned a corner and that you are motivated to lead a law-abiding life".
However, it then went on to say:
"However, in the view of the panel, particularly given the circumstances of your recall which indicated continuing poor consequential thinking skills, work to address cognitive deficits should be undertaken in closed conditions."
In my judgment that is the reason the Parole Board gave for not granting parole. That is the underlying reasoning and basis upon which I must consider whether it was unfair – as is alleged by the Claimant – for the Board to decline an oral hearing. Given that is, in my judgment, the underlying reasoning for the Parole Board's decision, I am satisfied that an oral hearing would have made no difference at all and have had no impact at all on that issue. What the Claimant seeks is an oral hearing to impact upon the question that he has turned a corner, but, as I have already indicated, I am not satisfied that that was an issue of fact which in any way impacted on the final decision and that, in any event, the Parole Board was willing to assume that in the context of its decision.