Community Care logo
Loading
E-Newsletters
Inform image
You are in:   News

The government has refused a recommendation from the joint committee on human rights to hold a public inquiry into the death of 16-year-old young offender Joseph Scholes, it emerged today, <b><i>writes Maria Ahmed</i></b>.

Thursday 10 March 2005 17:24

The government has refused a recommendation from the joint committee on human rights to hold a public inquiry into the death of 16-year-old young offender Joseph Scholes, it emerged today, writes Maria Ahmed.

In their response to the committee’s third report on deaths in custody published today, the government reiterated it would not be holding a public inquiry.

Since Scholes died just days into his two year sentence at Stoke Heath Young Offender Institution in March 2002, campaigners including over 100 MPs have urged the government to hold the inquiry.

The joint committee’s third report on deaths in custody submitted to the government said: “There has never been a public inquiry into the death of a child in custody. We recommend that the Home Secretary order a public inquiry into the death of Joseph Scholes in order that lessons can be fully learnt from the circumstances that led up to his tragic death.”

The coroner of Shropshire also recommended that the government should carry out a public inquiry.

But the government concluded that it would be “unlikely to bring to light any additional factors” not already covered by previous investigations by the Prison Service, Trafford Youth Offending Team and the Youth Justice Board.

However, in their report published today the government said it would address the coroner’s concerns on the appropriateness of the sentence, operational matters such as the effectiveness of pre-sentence and placement procedures, and whether the juvenile estate is able to provide fully for vulnerable young people.

Director of Inquest Deborah Coles slammed the government’s report as an “extremely dishonest” response.

She highlighted that it had “completely failed” to mention the recent deaths of young offenders Adam Rickwood, 14, Gareth Myatt, 15 and Gareth Price, 16.

Coles said: ”The report shows the government’s worrying complacency – all they are doing is talking about what they are doing to reduce deaths in custody without seeing that the lessons are not being learned. “

The Scholes family are currently engaged in a legal battle to get a public inquiry.

Yvonne Scholes, Joseph’s mother, said today: “We will continue to do everything we can to overturn the Home Secretary’s decision.”

A vigil will be held outside Minshull Street Court in Manchester on 15 March to mark the third anniversary of the date Joseph was sentenced.

It will be attended by the mother of Adam Rickwood, who became the youngest person to die in custody last year at Hassockfield Secure Training Centre in Country Durham last year.

Community Care last year campaigned for improvements to the youth justice system and called for a public inquiry into Joseph's death.

 

blog comments powered by Disqus
 
More from Community Care
Trending now logo
 
 
Social care link

 

    Transcare