Neutral Citation no. [2001] NIQB 18
Ref:
KERC3420
Judgment: approved by the Court for handing down
Delivered:
04.05.2001
(subject to editorial corrections)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN
IRELAND QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
(CROWN SIDE) ---------
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY CHARLES
CONLON FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
----------
KERR J
Introduction
This is an application by Charles Conlon, a sentenced
prisoner, for judicial review of decisions of the Governor
of Her Majesty's Prison, Maghaberry and of the Board of
Visitors to the prison, whereby he was ordered to be
detained in the Punishment and Segregation Unit of the
prison under Rule 32 of the Prison and Young Offenders
Centres Rules (Northern Ireland) 1995.
The applicant also challenges a number of individual
decisions by the prison authorities. In particular,
he claims that they failed to conduct a proper
investigation of his allegations that he had been
victimised and discriminated against on the ground of
race; he also claims that his being subjected to what is
described as "an individualised regime" is
unlawful as is the fact that he is kept under observation
while showering. Further he seeks declarations that
he is entitled to medical, dental and optometric care.
He claims that his television set was unlawfully removed
from his cell and that the imposition on him of a
"basic regime" is unlawful. Finally, he
asserts that the conditions in which he is detained are in
breach of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human
Rights.
Background to the applicant's restriction of
association
The applicant was sentenced on 14 October 1999 to a
period of two and a half years imprisonment on a total of
five offences. Before sentence, he had been a remand
prisoner at HMP Maghaberry. Since 21 November 1999
he has been located in the Punishment and Segregation Unit
as a result of a series of decisions taken under Rule 32.
These consist of decisions of a governor restricting the
applicant's association and decisions by members of the
Board of Visitors extending the periods of his
restriction. On 16 January 2000, he was sentenced to
a further period of six months imprisonment for
offences committed while in PSU.
According to Governor Mogg, the governor in charge of
Maghaberry prison, the initial decision on 21 November
1999 to restrict the applicant's association was taken as
a result of a spate of bad behaviour on his part that led
to his being charged with ten offences against prison
discipline between 28 October and 21 November 1999.
He was found guilty of threatening staff and their
families.
Governor Mogg has suggested that prison staff regard the
applicant as having a threatening attitude towards them.
It was accordingly considered necessary, the governor
said, to restrict the applicant's association in order to
maintain good order and discipline within the prison.
It was further considered that the applicant was a
disruptive influence within the ordinary prison regime
because of his attitude and behaviour and that this was
undermining discipline and control by officers.
On 22 November 1999 two members of the Board of
Visitors signed an authority to restrict the applicant's
association for a period of twenty days with effect from
that date. Following this, he was lodged in the PSU
and while there his behaviour has been monitored on a
daily basis. The monitoring process is used to
obtain information on which to base future decisions in
respect of the management of the prisoner and in
particular to decide whether there is a continuing need to
restrict his association. According to Governor Mogg,
the need for such a restriction is kept under constant
review. Where it is appropriate to do so, a prisoner
is reintegrated into the normal prison regime as soon as
possible. In the case of the applicant, this has not
been feasible because his behaviour has continued to give
rise to serious concern.
A new system of recording the results of the monitoring
exercise was introduced in April 2000, following a review
of the system of operation of the PSU. Copies of the
monitoring records generated by the new system were
produced in evidence and it was claimed that these
demonstrated that the applicant was a dangerous and
unpredictable prisoner. From the time that he was
sentenced, Mr Conlon has been charged on 65 occasions
with offences against prison discipline and has been
adjudged guilty on 63 of these. Forty-six of these
charges have related to behaviour in the PSU. In
addition to the restriction on association resulting from
his Rule 32 status, the applicant has lost a considerable
number of other privileges following these adjudications.
In February 2000 Governor Mogg carried out a full review
of all prisoners at HMP Maghaberry who were subject to
Rule 32 restrictions. Mr Conlon is the only prisoner
in HMP Maghaberry who has continued to be so restricted
for reasons of good order and discipline for the whole of
the period that the governor has been in charge of the
prison. After considering his case, Mr Mogg
concluded that because of the applicant's continuing bad
behaviour he would seek authorisation from the Board of
Visitors to have him remain subject to Rule 32
restriction. This was granted.
Since then, on each occasion that the applicant's period
of restriction has been due to expire, it has been
considered afresh by a governor. If he decides to
apply for an extension of the applicant's restriction of
association, the Board of Visitors is contacted with a
view to giving authority for a further period of up to 28
days in accordance with the Rule. The members of the
Board of Visitors are fully briefed about the
circumstances of the prisoner and are offered the
opportunity to review the records of his behaviour and to
see and speak to him.
Authorisation of restriction of the applicant's
association by the Board of Visitors
The applicant's version
The applicant claims that he has not been given
reasons for his detention in PSU since November 1999 apart
from a written notification on 30 June 2000 from the Board
of Visitors. This specified erratic behaviour and
threatening of staff as the reasons for the governor's
restriction of the applicant's association and the board's
decision to sanction that restriction from association for
a period of 28 days. In three affidavits filed by
him he makes no other reference to any contact between him
and the Board of Visitors.
The Board of Visitors account
Sophy Bryson is a member of the Board of Visitors at
Maghaberry. In an affidavit filed in these
proceedings on behalf of the respondent, Ms Bryson
described how she regularly attended the meetings of the
Board of Visitors at Maghaberry on the second Thursday of
every month. As a result of those meetings she
claimed to be well aware of the applicant's case, as it
had been discussed at length at every meeting since his
removal from association.
On 22 November 1999 Ms Bryson and another board member,
Lillian Jennett, had a discussion with senior staff in the
Punishment and Segregation Unit. The prison staff
informed them that the applicant had been removed from
association because he had assaulted a prison officer on
Sunday 21 November 1999 and that prison management
requested authorisation to restrict the applicant's
association for a further period. Ms Bryson and Ms
Jennett asked staff if they would inquire of the applicant
if he would speak to them. They were informed that
he did not wish to speak to them. The two board
members concluded that, because of the recent assault on
staff, the restriction on the applicant's association was
justified for a period of up to 30 days.
On 15 February 2000 Ms Bryson attended the prison with
another visitor, Clare McCarty, to consider the
applicant's continued detention in PSU. They had a
discussion with a member of staff who brought them up to
date on the applicant's behaviour and the views of prison
management. Again the applicant refused to see them.
After deliberating on the case, the two board members
authorised the continued restriction of the applicant's
association for a period of 28 days.
On 28 July 2000 Ms Bryson again attended the prison, on
this occasion with board member, Deirdre Brown.
Again they discussed the applicant's case with staff on
the Punishment and Segregation Unit and examined his
behaviour records for the period from April 2000 onwards.
They were informed that prison management had requested
authorisation to further restrict the applicant's removal
from association. On this occasion the applicant
agreed to speak to the members of the Board of Visitors in
the interview room in the Punishment and Segregation Unit.
He expressed boredom and frustration with his current
situation. The board members agreed that if he had
something to occupy his mind that this might help him to
progress from his current situation. Ms Bryson later
contacted the education department on his behalf and
"vigorously pursued his cause over the ensuing weeks
until a course was put in place". She and her
fellow board member nevertheless decided that the
applicant should continue to have his association
restricted for a period of up to 28 days.
Vilma Patterson is the chairman of the Board of Visitors
in Maghaberry Prison. In her affidavit she described
the nature of the monthly meetings of the board. The
governing governor or his deputy attends each meeting.
At every meeting a discussion takes place about prisoners
who are subject to Rule 32 restriction. Mrs Patterson
has been present at every meeting of the Board of Visitors
since the Applicant was first placed on Rule 32 in
November 1999. His case has been discussed in detail
at every meeting. It is against this background that
Mrs Patterson has taken decisions authorising restrictions
of the applicant's association.
On 21 December 1999 both Mrs Patterson and another
board member, Justin Gorman, attended the prison to
consider the continuing detention of the applicant under
Rule 32. They obtained information about the
circumstances in which the applicant had had his
association restricted and then discussed the case with
Governor Cromie. The governor informed them that the
applicant had been removed from association because of an
assault on a member of staff on 21 November 1999 and
because of his continued threatening attitude to staff.
Governor Cromie requested authorisation to restrict the
applicant's association for a further period. Mrs
Patterson and Mr Gorman attempted to speak to the
applicant in his cell in order to hear his side of the
story. He refused to see them. They authorised
restriction of the applicant's association for a period of
up to 30 days.
On 16 March 2000, Mrs Patterson again attended the prison.
On this occasion board member Deirdre Brown
accompanied her. They both spoke to staff in the
Punishment and Segregation Unit. They were told that
the applicant's behaviour had not improved. He
continued to have a threatening attitude towards staff and
had assaulted a member of staff in January. The
board members attempted to speak to the applicant in his
cell but he refused to speak to them. They therefore
authorised removal from association for a period of up to
28 days.
On 9 May 2000 Mrs Patterson again attended the
prison with board member Elspeth Cummings. They
received information from prison staff and read the
applicant's behaviour reports which had come into
existence the previous month. The applicant refused
to see them. They authorised restriction of
association for a further period of up to 28 days.
On 30 June 2000, Mrs Patterson again attended the prison,
on this occasion with fellow board member, Ruth Hewitt.
They spoke to PO Davy Brown and examined the up-to-date
behaviour reports. PO Brown informed them that the
applicant was still not conforming to a degree that he
could be moved back to a normal prison environment.
He informed Mrs Patterson and Mrs Hewitt that the prison
authorities had recently tried to move the applicant to an
upstairs cell in the Unit but the move had lasted no more
than a few minutes when the applicant reacted unfavourably
to the instruction given as to the regime on the upper
floor. He was immediately transferred back
downstairs. It was the view of the prison
authorities that if the applicant would not listen to them
telling him what to do in the Unit then he could not
expect to be moved back into the general prison
environment. The two board members then spoke to the
applicant. They told him that they wished to discuss
with him how best to facilitate his removal from the
Punishment and Segregation Unit. He informed
them that he already had his way out and showed them his
judicial review papers. He accused them of having
already made up their minds in relation to the renewal of
his restriction of association before seeing him.
Despite their attempts to assure him that this was not the
case and that they genuinely cared about his well being he
terminated the interview immediately. They
authorised a continuing restriction of his association for
a period of up to 28 days.
Mrs Patterson conducted a further review of the
restriction on the applicant's association on 23 August
2000. Graham Martin, a fellow board member,
accompanied her. They spoke to a member of staff who
informed them that the applicant continued to behave in a
threatening manner and had hit a member of staff in the
previous few weeks. Because of the applicant's
behaviour he had been subject to close supervision of his
movements. As a result of this imposition of the
Rule 32 regime the applicant had refused food for some
twelve days. Mrs Patterson and Mr Martin
attempted to speak to the applicant. Staff informed
him that they were present but he made no response.
The two board members then spoke to the applicant through
the Perspex grille of his cell. Again, he did not
reply. Mrs Patterson and Mr Martin authorised
his detention in PSU for a period of up to 28 days.
Later that day Mrs Patterson spoke to Governor Maguire
about her concerns in relation to the applicant's refusal
of food.
On 16 October 2000, Mrs Patterson and her fellow board
member, John Millar, attended the prison to consider the
applicant's continued restriction of association.
They spoke to a member of staff who informed them that the
applicant continued to be threatening to staff and that it
was the view of the prison authorities that the
applicant's restriction from association should continue
for a further period.
Mrs Patterson and Mr Martin also spoke to the applicant
for a long period. They discussed his continuing
detention and stressed that they wished to see him back in
a normal location. They told him that staff would
have to have confidence in him in order to have him
transferred back to a normal regime. They emphasised
that it was clearly best for him to return to a normal
environment. The applicant agreed. He
mentioned his current judicial review and expressed the
hope that this would resolve his situation.
Both board members were encouraged by the applicant's
commitment to the education programme that he was
undertaking but they decided to authorise removal from
association for a further period of up to 28 days.
Clare McCarty is also a member of the Board of Visitors at
Maghaberry Prison. She has been present at meetings
where the applicant's case has been discussed and she
claims that she was familiar with his circumstances when
reviewing the restriction of the applicant's association.
On 12 April 2000 she and board member, William Ward,
attended the prison to consider the applicant's continued
removal from association. They spoke to staff in the
Punishment and Segregation Unit of the Prison. They
were informed that his behaviour had not improved, that he
continued to threaten staff and that prison management
requested authorisation for his continued restriction of
association. While speaking to staff, they could
hear the applicant in an agitated condition and staff were
extremely concerned about him. A nurse had been
called. They went to the applicant's cell door but
it was clear he did not wish to see them. They
authorised a continuation of his restriction of
association.
Ms McCarty and other board members conducted similar
reviews on 4 June 2000 (with Ms Jennett) and 19
September 2000 (with Ms Doherty) with similar information
being relayed by prison staff, the applicant refusing to
discuss his case with the members of the Board and a
similar outcome on each occasion. On the latter
date, notwithstanding his refusal to meet them, Ms McCarty
and Ms Hughes decided to go to see the applicant anyway.
He said that they were merely a rubber stamp for the
governor. The board members found him to be quiet
and measured but they were unable to engage him in
discussion about his views. They asked him about
education and he confirmed that he had education
materials. They reviewed all the reports from early July
to date on the applicant and noted that his behaviour had
changed to an extent and that he had been upgraded in cell
accommodation. They concluded, however, that small
issues seemed to trigger a reaction in him and that his
behaviour was not stable enough to allow him to return to
normal association.
Ruth Hewitt, another member of the Board of Visitors, made
similar averments in relation to a visit to the prison on
19 January 2000. Mrs Hewitt attended with another
board member, Deirdre Brown, to consider the
applicant's continued restriction of association.
She discussed the applicant's case with senior staff in
the Punishment and Segregation Unit. They informed
her that on 3 January 2000 the applicant had attacked two
members of staff using a weapon taken from a piece of
furniture in his cell. She was informed that the
applicant's behaviour continued to be threatening towards
staff. The applicant refused to see the board
members. They authorised his continued restriction
from association.
Background to the applicant's other complaints
The applicant's version
The applicant claims that on occasion he has had to
"slop out" under the door of his cell and his
food is pushed in through the door. The only
furniture in his cell is, he claims, a bed which is a
raised slab of concrete. He has no access to books
or other reading materials. He is, he claims,
subject to a constant stream of abuse and taunts from
prison officers. This abuse has led to many of the
offences against prison discipline with which he has been
charged. He also complained about the conditions in
which he received legal visits. According to the
applicant, these took place in a portacabin and were
observed by prison officers through a two-way glass.
Because the glass was single glazed, the applicant
believed that prison officers could hear what was being
said during legal visits. (These conditions have now
changed.)
The applicant also alleges that he is held on 23-hour
lock-up in a cell whose dimensions are 10 feet by 6 feet.
He is allowed one hour each morning to wash, exercise and
clean his cell. A "Control and Restraint"
team escorts him every time he leaves his cell. He
had been on hunger strike from 11 August until 24 August 2000
as a protest at his conditions. At the end of this
protest, according to the applicant, he was told that
there would be an improvement in his conditions but, apart
from a relaxation in the use of the Control and Restraint
team, no improvement has materialised.
The applicant claims that he has no access to radio, the
gymnasium or tuck shop. On 20 November 2000, his
television set was removed while he was on a legal visit.
He receives his food in cartons and claims that, while it
is enough to sustain life, the portions are meagre.
He is provided with a gallon of water in the morning but
receives no hot drink throughout the day. He has no
access to tobacco and claims to be addicted to nicotine so
that he has suffered withdrawal symptoms.
The applicant also complains that when a doctor examines
him, prison staff remain at the door of the room in which
the examination takes place so that he cannot discuss
medical problems in private. He has asked to see an
optician and a dentist. These requests have been
ignored.
A recurring theme of the applicant's complaints is that he
has been verbally abused by prison staff. Often,
according to him, this takes the form of racial abuse.
He has made complaints but these have been dismissed
"out of hand". He also complains of having
been regularly assaulted by prison officers.
The prison authorities' response
Governor Mogg explained that as a result of the
applicant's behaviour and his location in PSU he was
entitled only to the privileges of a prisoner on the basic
regime within the prison. The basic regime is the
lowest level of privileges awarded to prisoners as part of
a system of progressive regimes introduced in the prison
on 20 November 2000. The introduction of the system
was designed to reward good behaviour and to create a
disincentive to poor behaviour on the part of prisoners.
The process is based on weekly written assessment reports
of behaviour. Depending on those reports a prisoner
may move up or down the levels or continue as before.
According to Mr Mogg, the applicant's weekly reports
clearly placed him on the Basic regime level. There
are two other levels of regime, standard and enhanced.
These are awarded to prisoners who have received
satisfactory reports for behaviour, work, co-operation
with programmes designed to tackle offending behaviour and
participation in other constructive activities.
The basic regime allows three privilege visits plus one
statutory visit every twenty-eight days. The
prisoner is allowed to have a radio cassette, or hi-fi
player. He may spend £20.00 each week in the prison
shop and may use a maximum of five phone cards each week.
He may engage in cell crafts and hobbies. He is
allowed a maximum of 62.5 grams of tobacco or 60
cigarettes each week. In addition, Mr Conlon is
entitled to a daily newspaper, access to the prison
library and its education facilities. These
privileges may be withdrawn in circumstances where a
prisoner is found guilty of an offence against prison
discipline at an adjudication.
In the applicant's case awards imposed after findings of
guilt on a number of adjudications have resulted in the
loss of a number of privileges for various periods.
Privileges lost include use of the prison shop, of the
telephone, of a personal radio and of earnings.
According to Mr Mogg, the dimensions of the applicant's
cell are 12 feet by 7 feet. Currently he occupies a
cell that overlooks the exercise yard. The window is
approximately 4 feet by 3 feet and lets in natural light.
As with all the cells in the PSU which overlook the
exercise yard, opaque glass is fitted to the windows for
security reasons and for the protection of prisoners who
are in the exercise yard.
Each day Mr Conlon is offered a one-hour exercise period.
Apart from that period, he has the opportunity to use the
shower and to mop out and clean his cell. Mr Mogg
also explained that PSU is a self-contained unit but the
applicant has access to both his domestic and
legal/professional visits in an area adjacent to the unit.
Mr Mogg confirmed that the applicant otherwise leaves the
unit only to attend court.
Dealing with Mr Conlon's claims in relation to the Control
and Restraint team, Mr Mogg stated that during August 2000
the applicant violently attacked a prison officer.
As a result the officer concerned received bites to two
areas of his body. Thereafter members of the standby
search team closely escorted the applicant every time he
left his cell. This action was considered necessary
to avoid the risk of further staff injuries.
Mr Mogg averred that the restriction on the applicant
imposed under Rule 32 related only to his association with
others. Any loss of television, radio, tuck shop,
parcels, reduction of privilege visits, access to gym, was
as a result of awards arising from Governor adjudications
or being on the basic regime. It was not as a
consequence of his Rule 32 status. Similarly, loss
of books or newspapers was due only to awards of cellular
confinement that had been made as a result of the
adjudication process. Where such awards have been
spent, the affected privileges have been restored to the
applicant.
He has had access to education facilities and to the
prison library and has been pursuing two courses, one in
mathematics and one in philosophy.
Mr Mogg explained the absence of a television from the
applicant's cell. This was because he is now on
basic regime. It is unrelated to his Rule 32 status.
The television was removed when the applicant was at a
legal visit to avoid confrontation. When he
discovered that the television had been removed and was
informed of the reason for its removal, according to the
governor, he attacked and injured two members of staff.
A senior officer sustained broken ribs and another officer
was bitten on the face. It was accepted that during
this incident some damage might have been accidentally
caused to some of Mr Conlon's belongings. He was
relocated after this incident to another cell by the use
of control and restraint techniques. The incident
was referred to the police for investigation.
Mr Mogg claimed that as a result of this event the
applicant is held in a special cell at the end of the wing
which has double doors and limited furnishings. He
has a bed, mattress, pillow and a full set of bedding that
is changed regularly. There is a toilet in the cell.
He can ask for reading material from the library and daily
papers are available on the wing.
On the topic of his food, the governor stated that the
applicant receives the same meals as other prisoners.
The food is wholesome. It is served in polystyrene
cartons for safety reasons. All prisoners in the
prison are served food by staff. The applicant has
access to fresh water every day. Any restriction on
tobacco was a direct consequence of loss of tuck shop
privileges and or cellular confinement arising from an
adjudication award.
On the subject of medical visits Mr Mogg said that the
applicant could ask to see the doctor at any time and if
such a request was made a visit to the doctor was organise.
Staff do not intrude on any medical consultation but are
nearby outside the cell in case of emergencies. According
to the doctor's wishes, he may see the applicant in his
cell with the door closed over but not locked. On
these occasions staff will observe proceedings through the
door observation slot. Alternatively the doctor may
stand at the door of the cell and conduct his consultation
from there. None of the doctors had made any
complaint to prison management with regard to this
arrangement. There is no record of the applicant
complaining about the arrangement.
Any request to see the dentist or optician is initially
taken by wing staff according to Dr Mogg, and then is
passed on to the hospital for action. There is no
record of the applicant having made a request to see an
optician but since the applicant raised this allegation in
these proceedings, Mr Mogg has had the matter checked and,
on learning that he still wished to see an optician,
arrangements for this were made. Two requests to see
a dentist are recorded dated 3 November 2000 and 14
November 2000. At that time only emergency dental
treatment was available in the prison as the dental
surgery within the prison was being refurbished. On
8 February 2001 Mr Mogg confirmed with the staff of
PSU that the applicant still wished to see a dentist and
this request has been relayed again to the hospital for
action as soon as possible.
On occasions when the applicant has become refractory and
violent he has had to be restrained by prison staff using
approved control and restraint techniques, according to Mr
Mogg. Mr Conlon has not been subject to either
physical or psychological abuse, Mr Mogg says. In
particular, he referred to allegations made by the
applicant in relation to two incidents in August 2000
when (the applicant claims) he received injuries at the
hands of the Control and Restraint teams. Mr Mogg
asserted that these incidents involved the applicant
spitting and assaulting prison officers and that there was
no evidence to support the allegation that any restraint
used in response to these incidents was other than the use
of reasonable force in the circumstances. Nor was
there evidence to suggest that any of the full body
searches of the applicant was conducted other than in a
professional manner and in line with current instructions
for such searches.
Mr Mogg suggested that the applicant's assertion that he
is constantly subjected to racial abuse was without
foundation. His record shows that on two occasions
he has made complaints (in July 1999 and October 1999) and
on both occasions the allegations were enquired into but
found to have no substance. It is not the case (Mr
Mogg said) that these complaints were dismissed out of
hand.
As regards the allegation that prison staff observed the
applicant while showering, Mr Mogg explained that he is
under direct observation when in the ablutions area in
which the shower cubicle is contained. Once inside
the shower cubicle he can only be seen in silhouette
through an opaque observation panel.
Mr Mogg stated that the applicant remained on Rule 32
restriction of association the Applicant remains subject
to Rule 32 because of propensity to assault and to cause
serious injury to staff and his "continued blatant
anti-authority stance which manifests itself in a series
of breaches of discipline including verbal abuse of
staff".
The applicant's case
On behalf of the applicant, Mr Treacy QC emphasised that
his application was not confined to an attack on the
validity of his Rule 32 status. He had a number of
discrete complaints about the conditions in which he was
held and the facilities that were denied him. He
also challenged the failure of the prison authorities to
properly investigate the complaints that he had made about
victimisation and racial abuse.
It was accepted that the applicant's complaints in
relation to legal visits had now been overtaken by the
instruction given to prison staff that they should
supervise visits through a television monitor so that no
question of their being able to overhear would arise.
Mr Treacy argued, however, that the applicant was entitled
to declaratory relief in respect of this matter.
In relation to the suggestion that the prison authorities
had failed to investigate Mr Conlon's complaints of racial
harassment and victimisation, Mr Treacy referred to a
transcript of an interview of the applicant conducted by
Governor Cromie on 21 July 1999. Mr Treacy
claimed that Mr Conlon had presented his case in a very
effective manner but that the governor had dealt with this
in a perfunctory way and tried to undermine the applicant.
He failed to address the applicant's complaint that he was
being less favourably treated. No effective
investigation into his complaint had been conducted.
Similarly, on 22 October 1999, when Mr Conlon made a
complaint of institutional racism the prison authorities
failed to address the issues raised by the applicant, Mr
Treacy claimed. A memorandum prepared by Governor Edgar
set out the applicant's previous convictions but said
nothing about the complaint that he had made, it was
suggested. Mr Conlon had said that he would detail
his complaints to an independent investigator but this
offer was never followed up. The failure to
investigate the applicant's complaint constituted a breach
of Article 3 of the European Convention, Mr Treacy argued.
In relation to the conditions under which Mr Conlon is
currently detained, Mr Treacy pointed out that the
provisions of the Prison and Young Offenders Rules
(Northern Ireland) 1995 authorised a governor to impose
cellular confinement for a maximum of three days.
Even a Board of Visitors could only impose a maximum of
fifty-six days. It was argued that the applicant is
being held in conditions which amount to solitary
confinement. It was well recognised, Mr Treacy
submitted, that solitary confinement can have a
deleterious effect on the health of those who are subject
to it. In the present case, Mr Conlon had claimed in
his first affidavit that he was suffering
"significant mental anguish and frustration" at
the conditions in which he was held. Neither this
nor an averment to like effect in the applicant's second
affidavit had been challenged. The conditions in
which the applicant was held constituted a breach of
Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
In this context, Mr Treacy drew attention to what he
claimed was the well recognised phenomenon that prisoners
on the whole distrust Boards of Visitors. What might
be perceived as the applicant's failure to co-operate with
the Board of Visitors should not be taken as a factor
adverse to him, therefore.
It was submitted that Rule 32 was not validly imposed in
the first instance and that the subsequent authorisations
of its extension were equally invalid because the
applicant had not been given information as to the reasons
that he was removed from association or as to why that
removal had been continued. None of the reports on
which the Board of Visitors had relied had been disclosed
to him. The first time that any reasons had been
proffered by the Board of Visitors for their decisions had
been 30 June 2000.
The case for the respondent
For the respondent, Mr Maguire stated that the Prison
Service regarded Mr Conlon as an extremely disruptive
and violent prisoner. He had been adjudicated guilty
of many offences against discipline and had persistently
refused to obey instructions. This level of
disruption, if it were observed and emulated by other
prisoners, could lead to a substantial breakdown in
discipline and good order throughout the prison generally.
Moreover, an intractable prisoner such as Mr Conlon
presented the prison authorities with a dilemma. He
did not mend his ways as a result of the awards imposed on
him. Doing nothing about this situation was not an
option. The prison authorities were obliged to
remove him from association (and to seek the Board of
Visitors' authorisation to keep him from associating with
other prisoners) where they considered that he would be a
disruptive influence. If one did not act promptly
and firmly to remove such an influence from the general
prison population, prison officers would quickly lose
control of a penal institution when it became clear that
prisoners were able to disobey orders with impunity.
The Board of Visitors was independent of prison
management, Mr Maguire pointed out. Yet every member
of the board who had reviewed the applicant's case had
recommended that he be kept from association with other
prisoners. So had every prison officer who had made
a weekly recommendation in relation to him. This was
unsurprising in view of his record. He had been
adjudicated guilty of sixty-three offences against prison
discipline. Some of these offences were extremely
serious. He had been found guilty of attacking two
members of staff with an item of furniture; of biting an
officer on the face and breaking another's ribs; of
assaulting other prisoners and of causing damage to prison
property.
It was submitted that there was no procedural requirement
to provide the applicant with reasons for his removal from
association although, as a matter of practice, these are
supplied through the medium of interviews either with the
governor or the board of visitors. The applicant has
refused the opportunity to be interviewed on a number of
occasions, Mr Maguire said, and in so far as he is unaware
of the reasons for his removal from association, this was
a situation of his own making and one which he could
readily remedy by agreeing to be interviewed.
Moreover, the affidavits filed on behalf of the respondent
now provide all the reasons for the removal from
association and this, Mr Maguire claimed, cured any
earlier omission.
Mr Maguire disputed the claim that the conditions in which
the applicant is held violate Article 3 of the Convention.
Many of the facilities that have been withdrawn from the
applicant have been lost as a result of his being
adjudicated for disciplinary offences.
On the subject of the investigation of Mr Conlon's
complaints, Mr Maguire pointed out that the interviews by
the prison governors of the applicant in relation to these
complaints pre-dated the incorporation of the Convention
into domestic law; there was no question of a breach of
Article 3, therefore. In any event, he claimed,
there had been an adequate examination of both complaints
and the applicant was given the opportunity to bring
forward any further matter that required investigation but
did not do so.
The restriction on the applicant's association
(i) The
reasons for removal
In Williams v Home Office
[1981] 1 All ER 1211, 1247f Tudor Evans J said: -
"It seems to me that Parliament, as reflected in
the Prison Act and the Prison Rules, drew a clear
distinction between Rule 43 [the English equivalent of
Rule 32] cases and cases of offences against discipline.
In the former case the prisoner has no voice in the
decision which is to be taken. When a man is
transferred to a segregation unit he is not able to make
any representation. In paragraph 166 of the
Radzinowicz Report it is said that before transferring a
prisoner to a segregation unit it is not necessary for
them to have been guilty of an offence, and it therefore
follows that there is no right to be heard or make any
representation against the decision."
Carswell J agreed with this view in Re Maguire's
application (1993 unreported). I had occasion to
consider both judgments in the case of Re Taggart
(1997 unreported). I said there (at page 11): -
"For my part I would not be prepared to hold that a
governor would never be required to inform an inmate
that he was to be made the subject of Rule 32. It
appears to me that each case requires to be considered
on an individual basis. As Carswell J acknowledged
in Maguire, in some cases there may be no good
reason why the grounds for removal from association
should not be discussed openly with a prisoner."
Both Maguire and Taggart involved a claim
that the applicant should have been informed before
he was removed from association. In the present
case, the applicant claims that he was not informed of the
reason for his segregation until June 2000. He
claims that the respondent has been at fault, not only
because he was not informed of the reasons for his
segregation initially, and has not been informed of the
reasons that he remains removed from association.
I consider that a prisoner who has been removed from
association is entitled to be informed of the reasons that
this action has been taken, unless it is so obvious why
this has happened that the information is superfluous.
Of course, it will not be necessary in every case that the
prisoner be informed before he is removed.
Frequently, that will not be feasible. But it now
appears to me that fairness requires that a prisoner who
loses the opportunity to associate with other prisoners
must normally be informed of the reason for that, in the
same way that those whose categorisation is changed are
entitled to be told of the reasons that this has occurred
– see R v Secretary of State for the Home Department
ex parte Duggan (1994) 3 All ER 277 and Re McCorley
[2000] NIJB 121.
I have reached this conclusion largely because I consider
that a prisoner who has been removed from association must
be entitled to make representations on the decision to
segregate him from other prisoners. On this point, I
respectfully disagree with Tudor Evans J in Williams v
Home Office. Nor do I consider it
necessary that a prisoner be found guilty of a
disciplinary offence before he is entitled to be told of
the reasons for his segregation from other prisoners.
Removal from association has been recognised as having a
substantial impact on a prisoner's life. It carries
the risk of psychological damage. In my opinion, the
requirements of fairness demand that a prisoner be aware
of the reasons for his removal so that he may make
representations upon it.
My conclusion that a prisoner should have the right to
make representations on his removal under Rule 32 is
prompted mainly by my view of the effect that segregation
from other inmates has on an individual prisoner.
That it has a significant impact on their lifestyle is
acknowledged by the provisions of the Prisons and Young
Offenders Centres Rules (Northern Ireland) 1995 that
govern removal from contact with others in the context of
disciplinary proceedings. Confinement in a single
cell without contact with other prisoners is recognised as
a significant punishment. On adjudications,
governors may only impose a maximum of three days
cellular confinement – Rule 39 (1) (f) of the 1995 Rules
- and a Board of Visitors a maximum of fifty-six days –
Rule 40 (2) (f).
The power to remove requires to be exercised
circumspectly. The governor may only remove a
prisoner from association under Rule 32 for a period of
three days and the Board of Visitors can only
sanction continued removal for one month at a time.
The Woolf report Cmd 1456 (London 1991) observed that the
use of the power of removal from association "will
invariably affect the inmate who is made the subject of
it". The former Chief Inspector of Prisons, Sir
James Hennessy, commented in his 1985 special report on
the use of segregation that "it can entail living
under an impoverished and monotonous regime which may even
be psychologically harmful". Circular 26/1990
and 6/1993 (which provides guidance to governors and
Boards of Visitors in relation to Rule 43 of the Prison
Rules in England – the equivalent of Rule 32 in this
jurisdiction) suggests that "authorisation [of
removal from association] for the maximum period should
rarely be necessary".
Clearly, therefore, the removal of a prisoner from
association should not be undertaken lightly and certainly
not without giving him the opportunity of making
representations upon it, although, as I have said above,
it is not invariably necessary that the opportunity to
make representations be afforded before the removal takes
place. The prison authorities must ensure that a
prisoner removed from association is aware of the reasons
for his removal at the earliest possible opportunity.
As I observe below, segregation from other prisoners is a
measure of last resort. It would be wholly
inconsistent with that view to sanction the withholding of
information which reveals the reasons that the applicant
was removed from association.
I am satisfied, however, that the applicant was told of
the reasons for his removal from association and that he
has had the opportunity to speak to members of the Board
of Visitors about their consideration of his continued
segregation. He was provided with a document on 21
November 1999 which stated that he had been removed from
association for the maintenance of good order and
discipline because he had assaulted a prison officer on
that date and had continued to display a threatening
attitude to staff. Subsequently, he was given the
opportunity to speak to members of the Board of Visitors
in order to discuss the reasons for his removal from
association and on, albeit rare, occasions he did so.
The applicant complains, however, that he was not provided
with the monitoring reports on which, it is suggested, he
could have made meaningful observations that might have
influenced the decision of the Board of Visitors. I
consider that the applicant, in common with any prisoner
who has been removed from association, is entitled to know
why the prison authoritiesrecommend to the Board of
Visitors that his segregation should continue. The
relay of this information need not necessarily take the
form of the release of monitoring records. Provided
it captures the essence of the complaints against him, a
gist of the monitoring records will suffice. Nor is
it necessary that the information be provided in writing.
If the nature of the complaints about his behaviour can be
conveyed in an interview, this will be adequate.
In the present case, I am satisfied that the applicant was
told of the reasons for his initial removal from
association and was given the opportunity to learn of the
reasons for his continued segregation. I am further
satisfied that, when he agreed to see the Board of
Visitors, he was sufficiently informed of the reasons that
his further segregation had been sanctioned. In
these circumstances, I consider that he could expect no
more by way of information. If he chooses not to
meet members of the Board of Visitors, the prison
authorities cannot be required to provide him with
information that the Board members would have supplied if
he had agreed to meet them.
In general, though, the prison authorities might deem it
prudent to set up some means of relaying to prisoners the
reasons for their continued detention, either by supplying
to the prisoner a synopsis of the monitoring records or by
releasing them in their entirety.
(ii) The reasonableness of
the decision to remove
As I have indicated above, a decision to remove from
association must not be undertaken lightly. Where it
is deemed necessary, the aspiration of the prison
authorities (and the Board of Visitors) should be to bring
the segregation of the prisoner to an end as soon as
possible. The longer that the removal endures,
therefore, the more scrupulous should be the scrutiny of
the reasons offered for its renewal. Boards of
Visitors should be aware of the potential for
psychological harm of a prisoner who is subject to
prolonged segregation from other prisoners. The
continued removal of a prisoner should only be approved as
a measure of last resort. In other words, the Board
of Visitors should only approve a continuation of the
removal from association where they consider that no
alternative to deal with the prisoner is possible.
In the present case the applicant has acquired a
reputation of being an intractable prisoner who is
unwilling to submit to a conventional prison regime.
He has been involved in frequent clashes with authority
that have led to many adjudications in which he has been
found guilty of various breaches of prison discipline.
He is mistrustful of the Board of Visitors and has
frequently failed to co-operate with them or to see them
when they wish to speak to him. This lack of
co-operation and contact between the applicant and members
of the Board of Visitors has made their task unenviably
difficult. In the absence of any contribution from
Mr Conlon, the Board of Visitors has been, of
necessity, reliant on the reports of prison officers as to
his behaviour.
Those reports were almost universally bad. In April
2000, when regular monitoring reports began to be
compiled, Mr Conlon was reported as being on a "dirty
protest" smearing his cell with excrement and
urinating beneath the door. He refused to obey
instructions and caused his cell to be flooded. He
was abusive to a doctor and threatened staff and their
families. In May 2000 his behaviour improved
somewhat but he was intermittently abusive and threatening
to staff and other prisoners. He was
"unpredictable and volatile", according to
prison staff. He would regularly pick on one member
of staff and attempt to goad that person into a reaction.
From time to time, however, he would be quiet and behave
relatively normally. This unpredictable pattern
continued throughout June and July. In August his
behaviour improved somewhat but he continued to stare at
staff in an intimidating fashion when removed from his
cell and, on occasions, verbally abused them. He was
overheard telling another prisoner that he would
"fix" a prison officer after his release and
that he had arranged to borrow a machine gun for that
purpose. He also threatened to attack prison
officers if he got the opportunity and stated that he
would "bite the nose off" an officer if he
could. He was subsequently involved in an assault of
a prison officer in which the officer received two bites
to his body. In September his behaviour was, on the
whole, better but there were occasions when he abused and
threatened staff on the smallest pretext such as when he
was not given beans with his meal. He singled out a
prison officer for particular abuse believing him to be
the son of a murdered officer. This officer
continued to receive abuse from the applicant during
October. During most of October and the first half
of November, however, Mr Conlon's behaviour, apart from
occasional lapses, appears to have been reasonable.
But on 13 November there was an unpleasant incident in the
"search box" when he urinated on the floor and
assaulted prison staff.
On 20 November while the applicant was on a legal visit,
his television was removed from his cell. I shall
discuss the reasons for this later. It was decided
to remove the television during the time that the
applicant was absent from the cell because it was
anticipated that he would raise violent objection to its
removal. That indeed proved to be the case.
When Mr Conlon discovered that his television had been
taken away, he attacked one officer, sinking his teeth
into the officer's cheek. A violent struggle ensued
in which another officer was also injured. After
being controlled by a restraint team, the applicant kept
up a barrage of abuse for the rest of the day.
Similar behaviour continued on succeeding days.
The applicant considers that he is the target of abuse and
victimisation by prison staff. He asserts that this
accounts for much of the complaints about his behaviour.
It is clear, however, that the Board of Visitors,
presented with the monitoring records that I have
summarised above, had little alternative but to renew his
period of removal from association. Senior prison
officers consistently warned that staff would be at
serious risk if the applicant were returned to the normal
prison regime. For the most part, the applicant was
unwilling to meet with the Board of Visitors.
In the face of consistent reports about his conduct
towards prison staff and other prisoners, the conclusion
reached by successive Boards of Visitors that the
applicant should remain segregated from other prisoners
was virtually inevitable.
His prolonged removal from association must remain a
matter of acute concern, however. He has now been
segregated for seventeen months. It appears to me
that the prison authorities and the Board of Visitors will
want to examine carefully all possibilities for bringing
this situation to an end. In view of the material
with which the Board has been provided to date, however,
it is impossible to say that their decision that he should
remain segregated is unreasonable.
The arrangements for legal visits
Although the arrangements for legal visits have now been
changed, Mr Treacy suggested that it was necessary that a
declaration be made that the arrangements that were
previously in place were in breach of the applicant's
rights.
The prison authorities have openly acknowledged that the
previous arrangements were unsatisfactory. They have
replaced those arrangements with the current provisions to
which no challenge is raised. There is no prospect
of a return to the previous arrangements. In those
circumstances, the issue of a declaration in relation to
arrangements which have been abandoned and which will not
be replicated would achieve nothing.
The arrangements for the applicant's showering
The arrangements for the applicant's showering are less
than ideal. He is observed while in the ablutions
area but he showers behind an opaque glass. In view
of the difficulties that have been experienced with him, I
cannot accept that these arrangements are unreasonable.
The removal of the applicant's television
A television was removed from the applicant's cell while
he was on a visit. It was claimed on his behalf that
he had a substantive legitimate expectation that the
television would remain in his cell; alternatively, it was
argued that he had a legitimate expectation that he would
be consulted before it was removed.
The television was removed as a result of a re-evaluation
of the regimes within the prison. It was determined
that the applicant should be on the "Basic"
regime. The basic regime is the lowest level of
privileges awarded to prisoners as part of a system of
progressive regimes introduced in the prison on 20
November 2000. There are two other levels of regime,
standard and enhanced. These are awarded to
prisoners who have received satisfactory reports for
behaviour, work and co-operation with programmes designed
to tackle offending behaviour and participation in other
constructive activities.
Nothing was put forward by the applicant to support his
claim that he had a substantive legitimate expectation
that the television would be allowed to remain in his cell
indefinitely. The applicant does not come within any
of the three categories outlined in Re Coughlan.
Nor was it shown that there was any practice of consulting
inmates before introducing a change to the established
regime. I am not satisfied, therefore that the claim
to a procedural legitimate expectation has been made out.
The timing and circumstances of the removal of the
television were unfortunate. In the months preceding
this, the applicant's behaviour, although still far from
perfect, had improved and some cautious notes of optimism
were being sounded. It was correctly anticipated
that Mr Conlon would be strongly opposed to his television
being taken away and it was decided to wait until he was
away from the cell. While, in hindsight, one may
question the wisdom of presenting the applicant with a fait
accompli, this decision could not conceivably be said
to be irrational.
Article 3 of the Convention
Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights
provides: -
"No-one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment."
The European Commission on Human Rights considered this
Article in the case of Dhoest v Belgium No10448/83.
In that case the applicant was detained in a mental health
institution on foot of an order of a Belgian court.
He complained that he spent most of his time in isolation.
In its Opinion the Commission stated: -
"116. The Commission has already been
confronted with a number of cases of prison isolation of
varying duration and severity … It has stated on
several occasions that prolonged solitary confinement is
undesirable, especially where the person is detained on
remand.
117. It has on other occasions
stated that complete sensory isolation, coupled with
total social isolation, can destroy the personality and
constitutes a form of treatment which cannot be
justified by the requirements of security or for any
other reason. It has moreover drawn a distinction
between this and removal from association with other
prisoners for security, disciplinary or protective
reasons, and would not normally consider that this form
of segregation from the prison community amounts to
inhuman treatment or punishment … The same reasoning
applies mutatis mutandis to persons who have been
committed to a mental hospital in the framework of
criminal proceedings.
118. In making an assessment in
a given case, regard must be had to the surrounding
circumstances including the particular conditions, the
stringency of the measure, its duration, the objective
pursued and its effects on the person concerned
…"
While recognising that solitary confinement for
protracted periods is undesirable, the Commission
acknowledged that there would be occasions when, in the
interests of good order and discipline, it is necessary to
remove a prisoner from association with others. Much
depends on the circumstances of the individual case.
These include not only the circumstances in which the
removal from association occurred in the first place but
also the conditions in which the individual is held and
the reasons for his continued detention. What began
as an acceptable regime may become inhuman if the basis
for the continued detention ceases to exist or if the
particular conditions in which the prisoner is held can no
longer be justified.
In Krocher and Moller v Switzerland D&R 34
(1983) 24 the prison conditions involved isolation,
constant artificial lighting, permanent surveillance by
closed-circuit television, denial of access to newspapers
and radio, and the lack of physical exercise. The
Commission concluded that these conditions did not amount
to inhuman or degrading treatment, accepting the argument
that such conditions were necessary for security.
In the present case the conditions under which the
applicant is held do not amount, in my opinion, to a
violation of Article 3. In view of the difficulties
of management that he has presented, I do not consider
that the conditions under which he is held are
disproportionate. Many of the privations of which he
complains are the consequence of awards made after
adjudications or the result of his being on the basic
regime. The removal of privileges for breaches of
discipline is essential to the effective maintenance of
order in a prison. Similarly, the institution of a
system whereby prisoners who conform and are not in breach
of discipline are rewarded by inclusion on an enhanced
regime is conducive to better behaviour generally. I
do not consider that the application of either system in
the applicant's case could be said to violate Article 3.
The applicant has claimed that the conditions in which he
is held adversely affect his health and, on that account,
they constitute a breach of the Article. In Livingstone
and Owen, Prison Law, the authors, considering the
effect of prison conditions on the health of an inmate,
state (at page 316): -
"It is clear that any Article 3 claim will require
cogent medical evidence to establish not merely a direct
causal link between the prison conditions complained of
and the injured or deteriorating health of the applicant
but also that the conditions were such as to 'destroy
the personality and cause severe mental and physical
suffering'."
In the present case the applicant has proffered no
medical evidence. I am not satisfied, therefore,
that the claim that he is suffering from significant
mental anguish and frustration has been established.
The arrangements for medical examination of the
applicant
Again, the arrangements for medical examination are less
than ideal. Given the applicant's history of
violence, however, I consider that the system which is
currently in operation achieves a reasonable balance
between the need for privacy on the part of the applicant
and the need for security for the examining doctor.
Access to an optician and a dentist
It is accepted that the applicant made requests to be
seen by a dentist and that he has now requested that he
should be seen by an optician. Emergency treatment
only was available for dental problems but the applicant's
request is being dealt with. Arrangements are being
made to have him seen by an optician. It is
unnecessary that any declaration be made in relation to
these matters.
Investigation of the applicant's complaints
Governor Cromie interviewed the applicant on 21 July 1999
about a complaint that he had made some days previously.
The nature of the complaint was not immediately apparent
at the start of the interview. The discussion
centred on a drawing that the applicant had executed of a
clenched fist in a 'black power' salute with a Celtic
design border. The caption on the drawing was
"Fuck the system". The applicant had put
this on the door of his cell. He was asked to remove
the drawing. He considered that this instruction
constituted discrimination against him because he was
black and Catholic. He pointed out that there was an
abundance of pornographic material covering the walls of
prisoners' cells and they had not been asked to remove
them. The governor asked the applicant whether he
agreed that the word "fuck" could be offensive
to people. Mr Conlon agreed that some people could
find this offensive. The governor then suggested to
the applicant that some people might find the black power
symbol offensive in the same way that a black person might
find a Ku Klux Klan symbol offensive. Mr Conlon
suggested that the black power symbol would not be visible
for most of the day because his cell door was closed.
The remainder of the discussion centred on the applicant's
assertion that the removal of the poster was
discriminatory of him as a black man and a Catholic and
the governor's suggestion to him that the poster could be
offensive to others.
On behalf of the applicant Mr Treacy suggested that the
governor attempted to trick the applicant into accepting
that the word "fuck" was offensive in order to
distract Mr Conlon from pursuing his complaint that he was
being less favourably treated. I cannot accept that
claim. I consider that the governor fully
investigated the applicant's complaint. No
restriction was placed on Mr Conlon. He was able to
fully ventilate his grievance. The questions asked
by the governor were apposite and pertinent.
Mr Treacy argued that the governor ought to have
interviewed the prison officer who took down the drawing.
I do not accept that. I consider that the governor
was entitled to conclude, on the basis of his interview of
the applicant, that the officer concerned was fully
justified in his decision to remove the poster.
On 22 October 1999 the applicant submitted a written
complaint that he had been the victim of institutional
racism. This contained the following passage: -
"The essence of my complaint is that I have had my
association restricted since 4 December 1998 and have
been brutalised, degraded and humiliated in that period,
whilst other prisoners (white ones) who are certainly as
bad if not, indeed, worse than me have only had their
association restricted for two or three months at a time
at most.
THE ONLY DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ME AND THESE OTHER PRISONERS
IS THE COLOUR OF MY SKIN.
I will detail my complaint to the investigating officer
as I do not feel able to express my complaint fully in
writing."
This elicited a response from the Operational
Management Division of the Prison Service in an
undated memorandum. It contained the following: -
"It is not apparent from your note, as you have not
specified incidences (sic) of discrimination,
whether you are making a general complaint or if you are
citing prison staff or indeed the Board of Visitors.
There can be no investigation without details of the
incidents where you allege discrimination took place.
It is fully appreciated that racial discrimination must
be taken seriously. It is, however, the
responsibility of the governor to ensure that all
prisoners, irrespective of race, colour, sex or religion
are treated fairly and without discrimination. You
have not shown that the governor has failed to achieve
this responsibility."
Governor Edgar had prepared a note on the applicant's
complaint on 23 October 1999. This
detailed Mr Conlon's convictions and his behaviour while
in custody. The memorandum also stated: -
"It is the firm opinion of management at all levels
that Conlon presents a real and continuing threat not
only to the good order and discipline of this
establishment but also to the personal safety of staff
and other prisoners. Perhaps the factor which
causes greatest concern is the apparent total
unpredictability of his out bursts."
Mr Treacy argued that the reaction of the prison
authorities utterly failed to address the complaints made
by the applicant. Governor Edgar's memorandum dealt
with the applicant's previous record rather than his
complaints. The letter from the Operational
Management Division did not address his complaint at all.
Mr Treacy argued that the Prison Service was under an
obligation to investigate the applicant's complaint both
under common law and by virtue of its duty arising from
Article 3 of the Convention. On behalf of the
respondent, Mr Maguire suggested that the Prison Service
was under no such obligation.
It is unnecessary to resolve the dispute between the
parties as to the obligation (if any) to investigate the
applicant's complaints. It is clear that the Prison Service
was prepared to investigate allegations of discrimination
if the applicant provided details of incidents of
discrimination. He has not provided those details.
I do not consider that the applicant is entitled to
require that an investigation take place before he
discloses those details.
Conclusions
I have decided that none of the claims made by the
applicant has been made out. The application for
judicial review must be dismissed, therefore. As I
have made clear earlier in this judgment, however, the
continued isolation of Mr Conlon is a matter of grave
concern. It seems to me that his continued removal
from association requires both the governor and the Board
of Visitors to scrupulously examine all possible
alternatives to the present situation.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
--------- IN THE MATTER
OF AN APPLICATION BY CHARLES CONLON FOR
JUDICIAL REVIEW
----------
JUDGMENT
OF KERR
J
----------