Is the prison justice system unjust?

Work with Offenders looks at a briefing from the Howard League on problems with the prison disciplinary system

Prison discipline

A new report from the Howard League for Penal Reform  (Monday 23 November) claims that the disciplinary system in prisons creates a pervasive sense of injustice, fuelling conflict and overcrowding, and should be overhauled, as figures show that the number of formal hearings has risen to a record high.

In a new briefing, the charity explores how rule-breaking in prisons in England and Wales is managed through formal disciplinary hearings, known as adjudications, where prisoners can be given punishments including solitary confinement and additional days of imprisonment.

Illustrated with anonymised case-studies from the Howard League’s legal work representing hundreds of children and young adults in prison, the briefing shows how adjudications have been used increasingly and unnecessarily as an everyday behaviour management tool – leading to punitive and arbitrary outcomes.

The Howard League reports that its legal team has encountered a host of troubling cases through its work, including teenagers who were punished for attempting to harm themselves and a young adult with learning difficulties who was ordered to spend longer in prison at a hearing where he did not have legal representation.

Official statistics provided by the Ministry of Justice reveal that the number of adjudications rose to more than 210,000 in 2019 – an increase of 76 per cent in eight years, despite the prison population remaining relatively constant.

The briefing argues that there is an overwhelming case for abolishing the imposition of additional days of imprisonment, which totalled more than 337,000 in 2019. This would bring England and Wales in line with Scotland, where the practice was ended to positive effect almost 20 years ago.

Although the number of adjudications rose in 2019, the total number of additional days imposed was lower than in 2018, when an all-time high of 380,169 was recorded. Recent figures suggest that the imposition of additional days has fallen sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic, which should prompt discussions about how policy could be reset and improved.

Justice and fairness

The briefing is the second to emerge from the Howard League’s Justice and Fairness programme, exploring how good order can be achieved in prisons in a just and fair way without resorting unnecessarily to punitive disciplinary processes.

It shows how the overuse of adjudications has placed excessive strain on the prison system’s already-stretched resources, leading to inadequate investigations and inconsistent application of the procedures. The number of adjudications that were dismissed or not proceeded with more than doubled between 2011 and 2018, and the proportion of all adjudications which were found proved fell from 73 per cent in 2011 to 64 per cent in 2019.

The chaos arising from the overuse of adjudications often results in procedural rights being threatened and can lead to significant delays and arbitrary outcomes. Even where an adjudication is dismissed, the weeks and months spent waiting can have a profound impact on the prisoner concerned.

As soon as a prisoner has been formally reported for having broken a rule, they will often have privileges removed, frequently by the officer who is making the allegation, without any independent review of the strength of the charge. The sense of injustice triggered by this summary punishment can be compounded when, as often occurs, lost privileges are not restored when charges are dismissed. The loss of privileges can also adversely affect the outcome of future parole hearings, redoubling the unfairness of an ineffective disciplinary process.

The briefing reveals that racial discrimination is entrenched in the system. In 2019 Black, Asian and minority ethnic prisoners accounted for almost a third of all adjudications, while comprising just a quarter of the prison population.

Children and young adults are also affected disproportionately. Between 2011 and 2018 the largest increase in the number of adjudications was for children aged 15 to 17. Young adults aged 18 to 20 received 14 per cent of all the additional days of imprisonment that were imposed in 2019, despite making up just over 1 per cent of the prison population.

Case studies

The briefing features several anonymised case-studies drawn from the Howard League’s legal work representing hundreds of children and young adults in prison disciplinary processes, we reproduce two of these below:

‘David’

David, a highly vulnerable 18-year-old with very complex mental health needs and a long history of self-injury, was adjudicated for damaging prison property. The damage was done when David broke off part of his cell to injure himself with. Although the prison rules state that where property is damaged in order to self-injure no charges should be brought, David was charged and found guilty by the governor, who fined him £48. The decision to charge David was a breach of the prison rules and he successfully appealed against the fine.

‘Josh’

Josh, a vulnerable 19-year-old with a history of self-injury, refused to follow an officer’s instruction when asked to stop injuring himself. He received 21 days’ loss of privileges at a governor’s adjudication. An appeal and complaint were not upheld by the Ministry of Justice and the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman respectively.

Conclusion

Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service says it is committed to the principals of procedural justice – the degree to which someone perceives people in authority to apply processes or make decisions about them in a fair and just way – but this Howard League briefing seems to show that while HMPPS may talk a good game, it is a long way short of applying procedural justice principles in practice.