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Corden, McClean, McCready, Caulfield and Northern Ireland Prison Service, In the
Matter ofIEHC GILA3084.html 21/12/2000 Lees, R v. [2000] NIQB 40 (2nd October,
2000)
COGF3267
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN’S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
________
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY MARTIN CORDEN FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
-AND-
IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS BY STEPHEN McCLEAN, NOEL McCREADY, AND ALAN
CAULFIELD FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
-AND-
IN THE MATTER OF DECISIONS TAKEN BY THE NORTHERN IRELAND PRISON SERVICE
________
COGHLIN J
1. The applicants in these associated applications are all
prisoners currently serving sentences of imprisonment at Her Majesty’s Prison
Maze. Each of the applicants had associated himself with one of the self-styled
terrorist organisations, the activities of which have produced so much human
misery in this jurisdiction. In the case of Martin Corden the organisation is
the Provisional Irish Republican Army, while the applicants Stephen McClean,
Noel McCready and Alan Caulfield claim to be “affiliated” with the group known
as the Loyalist Volunteer Force. With the exception of Alan Caulfield, each of
the applicants has been convicted of terrorist offences. On 2 February 2000
Stephen McClean and Noel McCready were convicted of murder, attempted murder and
possession of firearms and ammunition with intent to endanger life and both are
currently charged with attempted murder. On 10 December 1998 Martin Corden
pleaded guilty to possession of firearms and ammunition with intent. On 27 March
1999 Alan Caulfield was convicted of an offence of robbery which had been
de-scheduled on the basis that it was not a terrorist offence. Contrary to his
solicitor’s affidavit it does not appear that he was convicted of membership of
an illegal organisation. It seems that Alan Caulfield was initially committed to
Her Majesty’s Prison Maghaberry but subsequently transferred to Her Majesty’s
Prison Maze at his own request. Each of the applicants seeks judicial review of
decisions taken by the Northern Ireland Prison Service that the applicants
should be transferred from Her Majesty’s Prison Maze to Her Majesty’s Prison
Maghaberry. In the case of the applicant Martin Corden the initial decision for
his transfer was taken on 24 July 2000, reviewed and confirmed on 16 August 2000
and confirmed again for the purposes of these proceedings. The initial decision
in respect of the applicants Stephen McClean, Noel McCready and Alan Caulfield
was also taken on 24 July 2000, reviewed and confirmed on 4 August, 17 August
and confirmed again for the purpose of these proceedings.
The facts
2. Mainly as a result of the early releases resulting from
the provisions of the Northern Ireland Sentences Act 1998, the population of Her
Majesty’s Prison Maze has been dramatically reduced. This population presently
stands at 14 and these prisoners are segregated in accordance with their
association with particular terrorist groups. These prisoners at the Maze are
housed in two blocks, the staffing and maintenance of which make heavy demands
upon the resources available to the respondent. The current cost of running a
block at Her Majesty’s Prison Maze is in excess of £84,000 per month. The
substantial costs resulting from keeping two blocks open in order to continue to
house the small numbers of prisoners remaining at HMP Maze led the respondent to
consider transferring these prisoners to HMP Maghaberry with a view to closing
HMP Maze. The gymnasium at the Maze has been closed and there are no longer
educational facilities for the prisoners.
3. On 28 June 2000 a letter was written to all the relevant
prisoners at HMP Maze advising them that the respondent was minded to transfer
the prisoners to HMP Maghaberry and inviting each prisoner to make
representations about such transfer. The Director General of the Prison Service
established a special Allocations Committee to consider the issue of transfer in
respect of each individual prisoner and the transfer of each of the applicants
has been considered by this Committee. In each case the Committee decided to
proceed with the transfer after taking into account representations by each
applicant and their legal advisers. In each case the Committee sought advice
from the security governors at both HMP Maze and HMP Maghaberry with a view to
ascertaining whether there was any known threat in respect of any of the
applicants. In the case of each applicant, Mr Bain, the Director of Services in
the Northern Ireland Prison Service made appropriate enquiries of the RUC and
generally reviewed all the material put forward on behalf of the applicants in
these proceedings before confirming the decision to transfer.
4. The regimes in place at HMP Maze and HMP Maghaberry
differ distinctly in a number of important respects. There are both historical
and policy reasons for these differences.
5. Her Majesty’s Prison Maze opened in 1975 on the site of
the former camp at Long Kesh and inherited prisoners who had been granted
“special category status” as a result of which they were segregated into groups
claiming affiliation with various terrorist organisations. These inmates had
been allowed to spend their time largely free from interference by staff. On the
opening of the new prison an attempt was made to introduce a policy of
integration of prisoners which proved extremely contentious and, eventually,
segregated conditions were restored. A further erosion of staff control took
place and, in effect, prison staff withdrew from the wings. From 1994 no attempt
was made to lock prisoners in their cells during the day or night. The bizarre
regime which exists at HMP Maze is, unsurprisingly, unique in the UK prison
system as the Ramsbottom and Narey reports of 1998 confirm.
6. By contrast, HMP Maghaberry, which opened in 1986,
provides a regime typical of normal working prisons found in the United Kingdom
and many other jurisdictions. Despite being associated with one or more of the
myriad terrorist groups in Northern Ireland, prisoners in Maghaberry are held on
a fully integrated basis within landings where, in general, they associate and
work together. Supervision takes place by prison staff in accordance with the
practices observed in the prison system throughout the rest of the United
Kingdom. Upon entering or being transferred to HMP Maghaberry a prisoner is
automatically placed on standard regime although, depending upon his behaviour,
he may at a later date either move to a more basic regime or to an enhanced
regime. The regime at Maghaberry has also successfully housed policemen, army
personnel, prison officers and sex offenders.
The submissions
7. Mr Lavery QC appeared on behalf of the applicants, with
Miss Quinlivan on behalf of the applicant Martin Corden and with Mr Browne on
behalf of the applicants Stephen McClean, Noel McCready and Alan Caulfield. Mr
Maguire appeared on behalf of the respondent in both cases. I am indebted to
counsel for the assistance which I derived from their carefully constructed
skeleton arguments and concise and helpful submissions.
8. Without, I hope, doing injustice to his detailed
arguments, Mr Lavery QC relied upon two main submissions in support of the
relief claimed by the applicants. In the first place, Mr Lavery QC submitted
that any prisoner associated with a terrorist group would be subjected to an
increased risk to his life by a transfer between the segregated conditions
existing in HMP Maze to the integrated conditions at HMP Maghaberry. He further
argued that, since the right to life was a fundamental human right recognised,
as such, both by the common law and Article 2 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, any decision which brought
about a real increase in the risk to life should be reviewed by the court with
“anxious scrutiny” according to the relevant authorities and could only be
justified by a sufficient overriding interest. Mr Lavery QC further argued that
it was clear from the affidavit submitted on behalf of the respondent that the
respondent had concentrated upon identifying a specific, identifiable risk to
each applicant and had omitted to take into account the fact that any transfer
of a terrorist prisoner from the Maze to Maghaberry would automatically give
rise to a significant increase in the risk to life. Secondly, Mr Lavery QC
submitted that by subjecting the applicants to the more restricted and arduous
regime at Maghaberry the respondent was acting in breach of Article 7 of the
Convention insofar as a heavier penalty was to be imposed upon the prisoners as
compared to the time at which their respective criminal offences were committed.
9. On behalf of the respondent Mr Maguire reminded the court
that the respondent exercised a statutory discretion in determining the prison
in which a prisoner was to serve his sentence and that the exercise of such a
discretion could only be impugned upon a Wednesbury basis. He maintained that,
for the purposes of exercising such a discretion, the Prison Service was
entitled to adopt a policy which was that, subject to exceptions, a prisoner
could normally be transferred unless it was established that to do so would
result in a real or serious increase in any threat to his life. Mr Maguire
argued that a simple assertion that the risk to life had been increased was not
sufficient and that none of the applicants in these proceedings had established
a sufficient evidential foundation to show that any threat to their lives would
materially increase as a result of a transfer to Maghaberry. According to Mr
Maguire this was essentially a factual issue in relation to which the judgment
of the Prison Service should be allowed to stand unless it was successfully
impugned as Wednesbury unreasonable. Mr Maguire submitted that it was wholly
unreasonable to read the affidavits lodged on behalf of the respondent as
indicating that the respondent had not been aware that any transfer from HMP
Maze to HMP Maghaberry would, in itself, increase, to some extent, the risk to
the life of a transferred prisoner. Mr Maguire accepted that if any of the
applicants had established that any risk to their lives would seriously increase
as a result of transfer the degree of intensity of judicial review should be
that appropriate to an increased risk to a fundamental human right namely, the
right to life, but he argued that any such increase in intensity should be
proportionate to the increased risk which, in the case of each applicant, he
submitted was minimal.
The law
10. Section 15(1) of the Prison Act (Northern Ireland)
1953, as amended, provides:
“A prisoner sentenced by any court or committed to a
prison on remand or pending trial or otherwise may, notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in any other enactment, be lawfully confined in any prison provided
or maintained by the Secretary of State.”
11. Section 15(2) of the same Act gives the Secretary of
State power to transfer prisoners from one prison to another. It provides:
“Prisoners shall be committed to such prison as the
Secretary of State may from time to time direct; and may during the term of
their imprisonment be removed, by direction of the Secretary of State, from the
prison in which they are confined to any other prison.”
12. I respectfully agree with the observations of Kerr J
who, in In Re Mark Fulton’s Application (unreported 1 September 2000)
noted that the effect of these provisions was to furnish the Secretary of State
with an unfettered discretion as to the movement of prisoners from one prison to
another. I am further satisfied that the Prison Service was entitled to devise a
reasonable policy according to which this discretion should be exercised. As a
consequence of the substantial reduction in the prison population at HMP Maze,
consequent upon the provisions of the Northern Ireland Sentences Act 1998, the
respondent devised a policy according to which a prisoner could be transferred
unless any representations on behalf of the prisoner and/or the detailed
investigations and enquiries pursued by the respondent indicated that prisoner
to be subject to a specific or particular threat. In itself, I do not consider
this policy to be unreasonable.
In Fernandez –v- Government of Singapore [1971] 2 All ER 691, a case
concerning the risk of a fugitive being inappropriately tried or punished if
returned under Section 4 of the Fugitive Offenders Act 1967, Lord Diplock said,
at page 697:
“My Lords, bearing in mind the relative gravity of the consequences of the
court’s expectations being falsified in one way or in the other, I do not think
that the test of applicability of para ( c) is that the court must be
satisfied that it is more likely than not that the fugitive will be detained or
restricted if he is returned. A lesser degree of likelihood is, in my view,
sufficient; and I would not quarrel with the way in which the test was stated by
the magistrate or with the alternative way in which it was expressed by the
Divisional Court. ‘A reasonable chance’, ‘substantial ground for thinking’, ‘a
serious possibility’ – I see no significant difference between these various
ways of describing the degree of likelihood of the detention or restriction of
the fugitive on his return which justifies the court giving effect to the
provisions of Section 4(1)(c). But judged by any of these tests or by applying,
untrammelled by semantics, principles of commonsense and common humanity which
are subsumed by the Act, I can see nothing in the evidence in the instant case
to justify discharging the appellant on the ground that ‘he might, if returned’
be .... detained or restricted in his personal liberty by reason of ..... his
political opinions’.”
13. In the recent case of Osman –v- United Kingdom
(29 EHRR 245) the relatives of Ahmed Osman claimed a violation of Article 2 of
the Convention on the basis that the police had failed to protect him after Paul
Pagent-Lewis, a teacher, had formed a disturbing attachment. The court held
that, on the facts of the case, there had been no violation of Article 2 but it
examined the scope of the right to life in cases, involving a positive
obligation on the State to protect life, and stated, at page 305 paragraph 116:
“Accordingly not every claimed risk to life can entail
for the authorities a Convention requirement to take operational measures to
prevent that risk from materialising. ... In the opinion of the court where
there is an allegation that the authorities have violated their positive
obligation to protect the right to life in the context of the above-mentioned
duty to prevent and suppress offences against a person, it must be established
to its satisfaction that the authorities knew or ought to have known at the time
of the existence of a real and immediate risk to the life of an identified
individual or individuals from the criminal acts of a third party and that they
failed to take measures within the scope of their powers which, judged
reasonably, might have been expected to avoid that risk.”
14. The court rejected the argument that the failure to
perceive the risk to life or to take preventative measures must be tantamount to
gross negligence or wilful disregard of the duty to protect life and observed
that it was:
“... sufficient for an applicant to show that the authorities did not do all
that could be reasonably expected of them to avoid a real and immediate risk to
life of which they have or ought to have knowledge. This is a question which can
only be answered in the light of all the circumstances of any particular case.”
15. In the Divisional Court in R v Lord Saville and
others ex parte A (unreported 17 June 1999) Roch LJ, after a review of the
authorities relating to alleged interference with fundamental human rights
observed at page 461:
“The law is that such rights are to prevail unless either the threat that they
will be infringed is slight or there is a compelling reason why they should
yield.”
Finally, in R –v- Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Turgut
(unreported Court of Appeal (Civil Division) 28 January 2000), a case
involving a claim that the applicant would be subjected to torture or inhuman or
degrading treatment contrary to Article 3 of the Convention if he was returned
to Turkey, Simon Brown LJ stated that the issue was whether “... the Secretary
of State was bound to find a risk of this particular applicant being ill-treated
to be a real one.” In the course of the same judgment, the learned Lord Justice
had referred to the ECHR test as to whether a ‘serious risk’ of inhuman or
degrading treatment had been established in Article 3 cases.
Conclusions
The alleged breach of Article 7(1) of the Convention.
16. I respectfully agree with the observations by Kerr J in
In Re Fulton’s Application (unreported Northern Ireland High Court 1
September 2000) when he expressed the view that the conditions in which a
prisoner is held must be distinguished from the penalty imposed by the court. As
the learned judge then noted such conditions are a matter for the prison
authorities, the Board of Visitors and, in certain circumstances, the Secretary
of State. The court has no role in determining these conditions. Accordingly, I
reject the submission based on Article 7.
The right to life/Article 2 of the Convention.
17. It seems to me that, in deciding whether to exercise
the discretion to transfer the applicants in accordance with Section 15(2) of
the Prison Act, the Prison Service was required to take into consideration
whether it had been established that such a transfer would result in an increase
to the threat to the life of any applicant, the extent of any such increase and
whether, in the circumstances of any particular individual, such an increased
risk was justified by the requirements of the Prison Service. The discretion to
transfer has been specifically entrusted by Parliament to the Prison Service and
the court must not usurp the role of the primary decision-maker. However, where
the result of a flawed decision may imperil life a special responsibility lies
on the court which will subject the decision-making process to “anxious
scrutiny” or “rigorous examination” – see R –v- Home Secretary ex parte
Bugdaycay [1987] 1 AC 515 at 531 and R –v- Secretary of State for the
Home Department ex parte Turgut [Court of Appeal transcript 28 January 2000
at page 11). This higher level of intensity of review will be applied by the
court to both factual and policy decisions reached by the decision-maker. This
is an Article 2 case and I approach this case on the basis that Article 2 is
applicable but I bear in mind the words of Simon Brown LJ in Turgut when
he said, at page 11:
“I therefore conclude that the domestic court’s obligations on an irrationality
challenge in an Article 3 case is to subject the Secretary of State’s decision
to rigorous examination, and this it does by considering the underlying factual
material for its self to see whether or not it compels a different conclusion to
that arrived at by the Secretary of State. Only if it does will the challenge
succeed.”
In Turgut’s case the court recognised that there was a conflict of
opinion as to the degree of risk and it is clear that both Simon Brown LJ and
Schiemann LJ entertained some reservations about the decision, the former
referring to a ‘lingering sense of unease’ while, at page 17, the latter said
specifically:
‘I share my Lord’s view that the Secretary of State was not perverse in
concluding that he would not (be subjected to Article 3 ill-treatment), albeit
that I consider that he would not have been perverse had he come to the opposite
conclusion. In those circumstances there are no grounds for intervention by this
court.’”
18. In the context of these principles I have carefully
considered the steps taken by the respondent to assess any increase to the risk
to the lives of these applicants likely to result from transfer to Maghaberry. I
am satisfied that the procedure followed by the respondent was both
conscientious and painstaking incorporating, as it did, the setting up of the
special Allocations Committee to consider the case of each applicant and to
receive any relevant representations, the willingness to receive further
representations, if so required, the gathering of intelligence both within the
prison system and from the RUC, the additional review, carried out by Mr Bain,
which included the material submitted on behalf of the applicants in the course
of these judicial review proceedings and the willingness to remain open to the
receipt of any further information or representations which might be submitted.
The affidavits filed on behalf of the respondent indicate that this process,
quite properly, concentrated particularly upon the task of identifying any
specific or particular threat to one of the applicants. This type of threat was
identified in relation to the INLA prisoners convicted of the murder of Billy
Wright, who, themselves, were regarded as posing a risk to prison staff, and,
accordingly, a decision was taken not to proceed with the transfer of these
prisoners. However, the applicants make the case that in the course of carrying
out this process, the respondent failed to take into account any increase in the
risk to the life of a prisoner which, logically and inevitably, arose simply
from the change from the Maze regime to the regime at Maghaberry. Paragraph 5 of
the affidavit sworn by Brian Noel McCready, Assistant Director of Operational
Management in the Northern Ireland Prison Service, indicates that this specific
risk was drawn to the attention of the Allocation Committee by Mr Corden. At
paragraph 6 of the same affidavit Mr McCready recorded that:
“The members of the Committee were all aware that HMP
Maghaberry is an integrated regime but in the applicant’s case the Committee’s
view was that in no sense was he at greater risk in Maghaberry as a consequence
of that regime.”
19. At paragraph 4 of his second affidavit Mr Bain said, in
relation to Martin Corden:
“It remains the position that if the applicant is
transferred to Her Majesty’s Prison Maghaberry the assessment of the Prison
Service is that he will not be exposed to risk.”
20. In relation to the applicants Stephen McClean, Noel
McCready and Alan Caulfield Mr Forde, Assistant Director of Policy and
Professional Services in the Prison Service, provided an affidavit dealing with
the consideration of the applicants’ representations by the Allocation Committee
and recorded that:
“Moreover, the Committee noted that each applicant in his representations had
not disclosed any specific or particular threat to him. In these circumstances
and as there was no other factor which the Committee was aware of which would
make any applicant unsuitable for transfer it was decided that a recommendation
should be made in each case that the applicant be transferred to Her Majesty’s
Prison Maghaberry.”
21. Paragraph 6 of the same affidavit Mr Forde stated that:
“The members of the Committee were all aware that her Majesty’s Prison
Maghaberry is an integrated regime but in each applicant’s case the Committee’s
view was that in no sense was the applicant at greater risk in Maghaberry as a
consequence of that regime.”
22. At paragraph 5(ii) of his affidavit of 4 September 2000
Mr Bain confirmed the view of the Allocation Committee that these applicants
could be safely and securely housed in the integrated regime at Maghaberry.
23. During the course of the oral submissions Mr Maguire
candidly accepted that, as a result of the unique segregated system at the Maze,
the transfer of a terrorist prisoner to the normal conditions at Maghaberry
logically would, in itself, involve some increase in the risk to that person’s
life. However, he urged the court to accept that, on a fair reading of the
affidavits, any such increase in risk must have been taken into account by the
respondent, that no reasonable decision-maker could regard any such increase in
risk as anything but “slight” and that, in the circumstances, even if the
respondent had failed to take into account any such increase in risk the
increase was so slight that no reasonable decision-maker could have come to any
other decision but to transfer and that, accordingly, the court should exercise
its discretion to refuse to grant relief to any of the applicants.
24. I have carefully considered all the materials in this
case, in accordance with the authorities cited together with the helpful
submissions which have been made to the court. Having done so, I have come to
the conclusion that it would not be fair, reasonable or realistic to infer from
the affidavits furnished on behalf of the respondent that the respondent did not
take into account any increase in the risk to life of an applicant which might
result simply from the transfer between the two prison regimes. I have formed
the view that they did take this factor into account but, having done so, did
not consider that such risk was anything by slight. In the circumstances,
adopting the approach articulated by the Court of Appeal in Turgut I do not
consider that the material placed before the court compels a different
conclusion to that of the respondent in relation to any of the applicants and,
accordingly the applications will be dismissed.
25. I have noted earlier in this judgment that the
applicant Alan Caulfield does not appear to be a convicted terrorist and that,
during the course of the hearing, I was informed that, contrary to the averment
contained in the solicitors affidavit, he was not convicted of membership of an
illegal organisation. The robbery of which he was convicted was de-scheduled on
the basis that there was nothing to indicate paramilitary involvement. I was
also informed that, having been convicted of a non-terrorist crime, Alan
Caulfield was originally committed to HMP Maghaberry and that the subsequent
transfer to the Maze was at his own instigation, but did not occur as a result
of any allegation or complaint of threats or intimidation. I regard the false
assertion in the affidavit and the failure to deal with Alan Caulfield’s
original admission to Maghaberry as serious matters. In making applications for
judicial review the applicant must show uberrima fides and make full and frank
disclosure of all material facts. If leave was obtained on the basis of false
statements or the suppression of material facts the court may refuse an order on
this ground alone and, in appropriate cases, may set aside a grant of leave –
see R v Jockey Club Licensing Committee ex parte Wright (1991) COD 306
and ex parte Lawrence (The Times 13 July 1999). However, if his
application had been otherwise successful I would have been very reluctant to
withhold relief by an adverse exercise of the courts discretion in a case
involving a fundamental human right.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN’S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
________
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY MARTIN CORDEN FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
-AND-
IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS BY STEPHEN McCLEAN, NOEL McCREADY, AND ALAN
CAULFIELD FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
-AND-
IN THE MATTER OF DECISIONS TAKEN BY THE NORTHERN IRELAND PRISON SERVICE
________
J U D G M E N T
O F
COGHLIN J
________
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