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The current chief inspector is Charlie Taylor. HM Chief Inspector of Prisons is appointed by the Justice Secretary from outside the prison service for a period of five years. The post was created by royal sign-manual on 1 January 1981 and established by the Criminal Justice Act 1982 on the recommendation of a committee of inquiry into the UK ...
Dame Anne Elizabeth Owers, DBE (née Spark; born 23 June 1947) was Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons. Owers was the fifth holder of the post, appointed in August 2001, succeeding David Ramsbotham. Her appointment was renewed in June 2006 and in March 2008. [2]
Sinclair-Gieben was educated in Scotland and holds a Bachelor of Education and a master's degree in Criminology and Management from the University of Cambridge. [citation needed] Following an initial career in teaching, working with children with special needs in the Northern Territories of Canada, she transferred to public sector in 1998, working in criminal justice, immigration detention and ...
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor said ‘this latest inspection is a damning indictment of the state of prisons’. Bedford Prison in ‘urgent’ need of improvement, inspectors warn ...
From 1986 to 1995 he was chief executive of the charity Centrepoint. [4]From June 1995 to January 2003, he was chief executive of the Refugee Council. [5]Hardwick was appointed in December 2002 as the chair of the Independent Police Complaints Commission, taking office in February 2003; the IPCC existed in shadow form from 1 April 2003, and formally replaced the Police Complaints Authority on ...
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons said the system was taking an ‘inordinately long time’ to recover from Covid. Inspector warns of reoffending risk as prisoners locked in cells 23 hours a day Skip ...
The post of HM Chief Inspector of Prisons for Scotland is full-time. It has always been a lay appointment (an individual with no previous connection with the prison service). The Chief Inspector is appointed by the Crown under section 7 of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1989. [3] The Inspectorate's office is located in Edinburgh.
Inmates at two resettlement prisons in England and Wales are locked up for more than 22 hours a day with too little to do, inspectors have found.