R v Parole Board ex p Bagnall |
1 |
Issue: Whether a refusal of parole was unreasonable. |
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Hartshorn v Home Office |
4 |
Issue: Whether the Prison Service negligently failed to prevent an attack on a prisoner. |
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argaret Brooks v Home Office |
7 |
Issue: Whether the failure to transfer a pregnant prisoner to an outside hospital was negligent; whether it was causative of the stillbirth of one of her twins. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Mehmet and O’Connor |
12 |
Issue: The procedural requirements for allocation to or continued detention to a Close Supervision Centre. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Easterbrook |
23 |
Issue: Whether the tariff fixed for a discretionary lifer was unreasonable; whether fairness required an oral hearing before the tariff was fixed. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Easterbrook |
30 |
Issue: Whether the tariff fixed for a discretionary lifer was unreasonable; whether fairness required an oral hearing before the tariff was fixed. |
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R v Toney |
32 |
Issue: Alteration of sentence because of effect of Home Detention Curfew regime |
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R v Povey |
33 |
Issue: Alteration of sentence because of effect of Home Detention Curfew regime |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Quinn |
35 |
Issue: Whether the failure to transfer a prisoner to a different prison during a trial was unlawful |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Higgins |
45 |
Issue: Whether the Board unlawfully failed to discover the nature of the index offence in relation to an application for parole. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Pewter |
48 |
Issue: Whether an adjudication should have proceeded in light of the medical state of the prisoner |
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R v Controller, HM YOI Doncaster ex p Gaskin |
53 |
Issue: Whether a refusal to allow legal representation at an adjudication was lawful |
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R v Parole Board ex p Derbyshire |
56 |
Issue: Whether reasons for refusing an application for parole were adequate in light of the failure to mention whether and how account had been taken of the benefits of release. |
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Clarke v Crew |
59 |
Issue: Whether the police owed a duty of care to a prisoner committed to prison for 9 days “from his arrest” to ensure that the prison authorities knew the date of arrest. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Black |
64 |
Issue: Whether a disciplinary adjudication should be quashed on the basis of an inadequate inquiry. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Glen Fielding |
65 |
Issue: Whether the policy relating to the issuing of condoms in prison was lawful |
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R v Home Office ex p A |
69 |
Issue: Whether time spent on remand in non-secure local authority accommodation was be deducted from a custodial sentence in calculating the release date. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Bannori-Shah |
74 |
Issue: Whether a refusal to release on compassionate grounds was irrational. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Bannori-Shah |
76 |
Issue: Whether a refusal to release on compassionate grounds was irrational. |
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R v Governor of HMP Latchmere House and Parole Board ex p Jarvis |
78 |
Issue: Whether the transfer of a prisoner and recategorisation to a higher security category was lawful; whether the refusal of parole was lawful. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Simms and O’Brien |
82 |
Issue: The lawfulness of the Home Secretary’s restrictions on visits to prisoners by journalists (which required an undertaking not to use the material obtained). |
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Reeves v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis |
99 |
Issue: Whether the police owed a duty of care to prevent a prisoner in custody committing suicide; whether the defences of volenti non fit injuria or novus actus interveniens applied; and whether the deceased was contributorily negligent |
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R v Parole Board ex p Robinson |
118 |
Issue: Whether a Parole Board lifer panel could reopen the question of risk after an adjournment to put a release package into effect. |
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Ganusaukas v Lithuania |
124 |
Issue: Whether the suspension of a parole licence and recall to prison breached Arts 5.1, 5.4 or 6 European Convention. |
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R v Parole Board and Home Secretary ex p Oyston |
127 |
Issue: Whether the Parole Board had carried out an appropriate balancing act in determining not to release a prisoner on parole |
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R v Sharkey |
134 |
Issue: Whether an order for return to custody could be made by a court in relation to a prisoner recalled to custody by the Home Secretary |
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R v Parole Board ex p Curley |
138 |
Issue: Whether a decision to uphold the recall of a life sentence prisoner was reasonable. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Blackstock |
146 |
Issue: The process to be followed when the Home Secretary does not follow a Parole Board recommendation that a life sentence prisoner be moved to open prison conditions |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Oshin |
149 |
Issue: The correct approach to the calculation of the early release dates of a prisoner repatriated to the UK under the Convention on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons. |
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Toumia v Evans (Secretary General of the Prison Officers Association) |
153 |
Issue: Whether locking prisoners in their cells whilst a staff meeting was held which went longer than authorised by the governor might arguably give rise to false imprisonment and/or misfeasance in a public office. |
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R v Home Secretary and Governor HMP Whatton ex p Allen |
164 |
Issue: The procedural requirements in relation to the process of release on Home Detention Curfew. |
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R v Governor of Sudbury Prison ex p Minge |
169 |
Issue: The reasonableness of a decision to transfer a life sentence prisoner from open to closed conditions on account of continued cannabis use. |
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R v Home Secretary ex p Andrews |
172 |
Issue: Whether a challenge to the lawfulness of a licence condition should be allowed when a prosecution for breach of the condition was pending. |
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Robert Kerr v UK |
174 |
Issue: Whether the recall to prison of a mandatory life sentence prisoner released on licence breached Art 5, 6, 8, 13 or 14 European Convention |
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R v Governor of HMP Pentonville ex p Lynn |
179 |
Issue: Whether effect should be given to a Court indication as to when a sentence would begin to run. |
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Demirtepe v France |
183 |
Issue: Whether there was a breach of Art 8 in the opening of a prisoner’s correspondence |
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V v UK; T v UK |
189 |
Issue: Whether the trials of children charged with murder breached Arts 3 and 6 of the Convention; whether the sentence of detention during Her Majesty’s Pleasure breached Arts 3, 5, and 6 of the Convention. |
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Connor v Secretary of State for Scotland |
221 |
Issue: Whether there was a breach of a duty of care towards an officer in placing prisoners together where such placement increased the risk of attack and/or in failing to tell him that the prisoners had been placed together |
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