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  1. Media Law
January 24, 2018

Sun and Mail threaten legal challenge to obtain Parole Board report on release of rapist John Worboys

By PA Media Lawyer

Two national newspapers have threatened to launch a legal challenge if the Parole Board does not disclose its reasons for approving the release of black cab rapist John Worboys from prison.

The Sun and the Daily Mail have written to the board and to Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor David Gauke to demand publication of the confidential report that led to the decision to direct that Worboys should be released after having spent a decade behind bars.

The papers said they had given officials seven days to respond and any refusal to the request would see their lawyers ready to launch a full judicial review application.

An article on The Sun’s website said: “The letter says the Parole Board’s report is ‘integral to the debate on a matter of profound public interest’ where there is ‘overwhelming public concern’.

“It warns the decision to keep the Worboys ruling secret is a breach of open justice and freedom of expression. And it concludes: ‘We require that you publish the decision relating to Mr Worboys’.”

The Daily Mail said on its website: “Rule 25 of Parole Board Rules state that information about decisions made on the release of prisoners ‘must not be made public’.

“But the Mail and The Sun are arguing that such is the severity of the crimes for which he was convicted that the normal rules should be set aside.”

Worboys was jailed indefinitely in 2009, with a minimum term of eight years, for drugging and sexually assaulting women passengers. He was convicted of 19 offences against 12 victims.

But it is feared that the 60-year-0ld might have attacked more than 100 victims, with the Parole Board’s decision sparking outcry when it was made public earlier this month.

The Parole Board said it was legally prohibited from disclosing decisions or evidence.

A spokesman added: “That is exactly why Nick Hardwick (chair of the Parole Board) called for a review of the transparency around Parole Board decisions and welcomed the Lord Chancellor’s announcement to do just that.”

Last week, Gauke said a review would examine whether there should be a mechanism to allow parole decisions to be reconsidered.

Police said yesterday that they were investigating a fresh allegation of historical sexual assault which is understood to have been made against Worboys.

The incident was said to have taken place in 1997 and was reported to police this month. Worboys, who has now been moved to a London prison in advance of his planned release, has not been arrested.

The news that Worboys had been transferred from Wakefield jail in West Yorkshire to Belmarsh prison in south-east London at the weekend sparked a fresh wave of outrage.

Lawyers for victims said the move, first reported by The Sun, was “extremely distressing” for them and followed calls for Worboys to to be located away from Greater London and banned from entering the capital.

Tory MP Zac Goldsmith said the proposed release of Worboys has “absolutely horrified” his victims, who were “appalled” to learn of his move to Belmarsh.

It is understood Worboys’ release is not imminent, and that his transfer does not necessarily mean he will be freed into the capital.

Last week, Gauke stressed that Worboys would not be released until his licence conditions were finalised, and victims signed up to a contact scheme had had their say on the restrictions.

Worboys is expected to spend several months in a probation hostel when he is released. These hostels are staffed 24 hours a day and impose restrictions on residents such as a night-time curfew. There are 101 probation hostels in England and Wales.

Gauke last week ruled out the possibility of a government challenge to the Parole Board’s decision to release Worboys, but lawyers for two victims have said they intend to pursue the case in the courts.

Picture: Metropolitan Police/PA Wire

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