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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 >> Kane, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Justice [2022] EWHC 1376 (Admin) (07 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1376.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1376 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of) PETER KANE |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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THE INDEPENDENT ADJUDICATOR |
Defendant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE |
Interested Party |
____________________
Myles Grandison (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 11 May 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HUGH MERCER QC:
Factual Background
"due to the nature and the police returning the charge I will send to the independent adjudicator"
"Is the IA satisfied that the Governor gave proper consideration to whether the charge is so serious that added days should be awarded if the prisoner is guilty (i.e. the offence poses a very serious risk to order and control of the establishment, or the safety of those within it)?"
The Legal Framework
"(1) before inquiring into a charge the governor shall determine (i) whether the charge is so serious that additional days should be awarded for the offence if the prisoner is found guilty, or (ii) whether it is necessary or expedient for some other reason for the charge to be inquired into by the adjudicator
(2) where the governor determines:
(a) that it is so serious or that it is necessary or expedient for some other reason for the charge to be inquired into by the adjudicator, he shall:
(i) refer the charge to the adjudicator forthwith for him to inquire into it;
(ii) refer any other charge arising out of the same incident to the adjudicator forthwith for him to inquire into it; and
(iii) inform the prisoner who has been charged that he has done so;
(b) that it is not so serious or that it is not necessary or expedient for some other reason for the charge to be inquired into by the adjudicator, he shall proceed to inquire into the charge."
"2.31 the adjudicator should state their reasons for referral to the IA on form IA1 under 'additional comments', as quoting 'seriousness of the offence' alone may not be sufficient in all cases. Care should be taken not to compromise their independence; Staff must not discuss individual cases with the IA.
2.32 The test for seriousness (see paragraph 2.28 in this Annex) is whether the offence poses a very serious risk to order and control of the establishment, or the safety of those within it. Governors/Directors should also bear in mind that IAs are an expensive resource, as is the legal aid that prisoners may claim for representation at IA hearings. Each case will be assessed on its merits, but the following offers some guidance:
- Serious assaults should always be referred, e.g. those where the injuries include broken bones, broken skin, or serious bruising ..."
The Procedural Background
"The ground advanced is arguable and raises an important point of practice. It is also arguable that the Judge's alternative basis for rejecting the application at paragraph 16 of his judgement fails to address the relevant question of whether the prison governor made the determination required by rule 53A."
i) Although there was no material before the adjudicator to explain why the prison governor had made a decision that the 'so serious' test was satisfied, because the adjudicator had no obligation to investigate the factual basis upon which the prison governor found that the 'so serious' test was met on the facts, the adjudicator could not have acted unlawfully in failing so to inquire;
ii) The conduct in this case was plainly sufficient to satisfy the 'so serious' test and in any event the claimant had pleaded guilty to two of four charges which showed that it was entirely proper to have referred the case to an adjudicator.
The Role of Independent Adjudicators
"Once a charge has been referred to an IA it cannot be referred back to a governor - the IA will deal with it from then on. However, if the IA considers the referral to have been unlawful, they may decide not to proceed and therefore the adjudication will be dismissed. An unlawful referral would be one in which the PSI or Prison or YOI rules have not been correctly followed i.e. the case should not have been referred in the first place if the guidelines in the PSI were followed correctly, for example, if a Governor referred a case that was simply a charge of disobeying an Officer, with no other aggravating features."
Analysis of the Independent Adjudicator's Reasoning
"First there are certain types of matter which are considered serious enough for referral in the light of COVID-19 hearings and the new regulations."
"Consideration was given to what types of case should be referred to an IA and guidance was issued to prison governors on the 29th May by the MoJ, together with a process map. I append a copy of the guidance ['Appendix A'].
"As always, the priority for the chief magistrate will be to keep an adequate supply of judges for the running of the court system. Owing to a depleted pool of IAs available to attend prison, under the restricted regime that is now in place, we urge adjudicating governors to carefully consider the cases which are referred to the IA and reserve this for the most serious of cases (please refer to the guidance in PSI 05/2018, Prisoner Discipline Procedures).
The circumstances of each case, not just the charge in question, must determine the seriousness of a case. We consider the following charges are likely to fall into your most serious category:
PR 51(1), YOI 55(1) Assault: Assaulting prison officer …
You will know best how to categorise the serious incidents of prisoner rule/law breaking in your establishment, which is why the list is intended to be used as a guide to help in your decision-making. It is not intended to be exhaustive and the circumstances of each case must always drive your decisions ... If your referral falls outside of the charges listed above, please ensure that you include an explanation to cover why you have deemed the charge necessary or sufficiently serious for IA referral." (emphasis in original)
"Second although the governor does not explicitly say so, he felt that the matter was serious enough for referral to the police.
"The crimes below must be reported to the police for investigation.
…
- Assaults against a member of staff, except where there is no little or no injury (see Annex B)"
Annex B of the same document under the heading "Staff Assaults" states:
"1. Other than those less serious assaults where there is little or no injury, which are more appropriately dealt with by adjudication, all assaults on staff will be referred to the police for investigation and consideration for prosecution."