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Tuesday 26 March 2024

Lazy bureaucrats



Andrew Tettenborn has an interesting CAPX piece on a remarkable example of bureaucratic sloth in the prison system.


Lazy bureaucrats are threatening the rule of law

If you want a serious example of broken Britain that doesn’t neatly fit the Left’s culture of blaming everything on populism and underfunding, look no further than what happened at Wandsworth prison earlier this year, as described in a High Court judgment reported last week.

On a Tuesday morning, Westminster magistrates sentenced a Korean gentleman, Bumju Kim, to ten weeks for assault. Since he had already spent more than that on remand, he should have been set free. Instead he was bundled straight back on the bus to HMP Wandsworth. Wandsworth that evening realised something was wrong, but calmly told Mr Kim that even if it was, nothing could be done for a couple of days. Meanwhile, Mr Kim would just have to stay unlawfully cooped up in a stinking prison.



The whole piece is well worth reading, both as an example of bureaucratic sloth and because of the not unfamiliar culture which allowed it.


At about 2:30 on Wednesday morning, a High Court judge issued a writ of habeas corpus addressed to the Governor herself, commanding her either to release Mr Kim or bring him before him by 11am next day. The lawyer rang the prison early next morning, presumably with this news, but the receptionist refused to put him through to either the Duty Governor or the Offender Management Unit. Nor was Mr Kim brought before the court by 11 (though he was released a little later). Ordered by a furious judge to file evidence within seven days explaining her plain disobedience to a habeas corpus writ, the Governor did nothing. She finally responded some days later after a threat to sentence her for contempt of court...

The judge himself hit the nail on the head. The Governor of Wandsworth seemed, he said, to have regarded a court order as not so much an order but a target: as something to be slotted in to the other matters of routine and performed as and when possible. That’s bad enough with orders addressed to private litigants to do this or that. With orders concerning the liberty of the subject it is, as the judge made clear, unforgivable.

8 comments:

Peter MacFarlane said...

A diversity hire, I imagine.

The Jannie said...

We have friends who work in the Prison Service; it's an endless fount of stories of bad management applied by "managers" who have risen to the level of their own incompetence. Didn't someone mention "the lunatics running the asylum"? That sums up Prison Service.

DiscoveredJoys said...

As long as members in good standing within the Blob can choose to disregard legal instructions without punishment that gurgling sound (of our society going down the drain) will continue.

A K Haart said...

Peter - sounds like it - a growing problem.

Jannie - interesting, it seems to be a problem across the public sector, worse in some areas than others.

DJ - I agree, it's a pity the judge didn't award her a week inside.

Tammly said...

Award her a week inside? She'd interpret that as 'working from home'!

A K Haart said...

Tammly - good point, it would have to be much longer to be effective.

djc said...

Working att home? or living at the office?

A K Haart said...

djc - both in a way. Like living above the shop.