Olliers
Solicitors’ has a Face book site run on a voluntary basis to help
provide general information, education and communication concerning
issues affecting prisoners, their rights and entitlements, their
privileges, and on all aspects of prison life, including prisoner
progression, sentence planning, discipline, recall, parole, category
reviews. This list is not exhaustive.
Olliers Solicitors authorise the administrators to offer legal advice and assistance to members on these topics, including advice and assistance in relation to appeals against conviction and sentence and to promote and encourage communication between prisoners loved ones and families.
Olliers Solicitors are not responsible for any legal advice and assistance offered and relied upon by anyone other than an official administrator. Furthermore, Olliers Solicitors are not responsible for any personal opinion expressed or material posted by any single individual member. The administrators do their best together with Olliers
We will always try to respond at the earliest opportunity and we are only too happy to help when we are able to. However, please respect that this is not always possible out of office hours. In the event that you do not receive a response please feel free to remind us but this is a service provided on a voluntary basis.The Olliers Prison Law Team.
Olliers Solicitors authorise the administrators to offer legal advice and assistance to members on these topics, including advice and assistance in relation to appeals against conviction and sentence and to promote and encourage communication between prisoners loved ones and families.
Olliers Solicitors are not responsible for any legal advice and assistance offered and relied upon by anyone other than an official administrator. Furthermore, Olliers Solicitors are not responsible for any personal opinion expressed or material posted by any single individual member. The administrators do their best together with Olliers
We will always try to respond at the earliest opportunity and we are only too happy to help when we are able to. However, please respect that this is not always possible out of office hours. In the event that you do not receive a response please feel free to remind us but this is a service provided on a voluntary basis.The Olliers Prison Law Team.
We Need To Talk To And About Kevin
Kevin
is serving a sentence at a prison in the South of England. He is
on the autistic spectrum and has significant learning disabilities. He
has a parole hearing coming up next month. The hearing will be over two years late.
Kevin was convicted of an serious offence over seventeen
years ago. He has a ‘tariff’ (minimum term) of fifteen years which
ended over two years ago. At that point he was entitled to try to
persuade the Parole Board that they should release him on licence.
Kevin does not understand what parole means. Until he met a lawyer,
he believed that he needed to complete the Maths and English courses he
was doing in prison, then give his certificates to the judge who
sentenced him. At that point he would be released to his old flat.
Over two years ago he received some paperwork he did not understand.
Someone at the prison suggested that he talk to a lawyer. He was
fortunate to find one who regularly visited the prison he was in. She
read the paperwork he had been given. She discovered that he had spent
ten years at the same establishment, most of the time alone in his cell
and had not come to the attention of staff. It was obvious to her within
minutes of meeting Kevin that he had learning difficulties. No formal
assessments had been carried out and he had not completed any of the
interventions that would be expected of a prisoner serving a life
sentence.
The lawyer explained to Kevin that the paperwork he had been given
was a set of directions made by the Parole Board for his case and that
there would be an oral hearing at the prison. She told him what a
‘minimum term’ meant and tried to explain how a parole hearing worked.
Kevin did not understand many of the words his lawyer used but he put
his trust in her. She set about the laborious task of trying to get a
meaningful parole hearing for him.
There are quite a lot of people like Kevin in prison. Some of them
do not have a lawyer. Some have lawyers who do not approach their cases
like Kevin’s lawyer. That might be because they do not have the
expertise they need. It might be because the swingeing legal aid cuts
imposed in 2013 act as a huge disincentive to spend the kind of time
that these cases need.
In the criminal and family courts, there has been some recognition
that steps need to be taken to safeguard the rights and interests of
vulnerable witnesses and defendants. This development has not yet been
mirrored in the closed world of prisons and parole.
What responsibility does the Parole Board and Her Majesty’s
Prison and Probation Service have towards people like Kevin? What would
it take for Kevin to have a fair parole hearing?
The National Autistic Society’s annual conference, Care and Treatment of Offenders with a Learning and/or Developmental Disability
takes place this week. I will be co-presenting a session with Yvette
Bates from HMP Dovegate tomorrow morning at which we will be exploring
the issues I have described here.
In the second part of this article I will set out what we might do to ensure we talk to as well as about Kevin.
Andrew Sperling
is a Consultant Solicitor-Advocate with Olliers Solicitors. He worked
at the Parole Board on governance and stakeholder projects between 2014
and 2015. ‘Kevin’ is a real person with a different name.
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