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The parole board are not fit for purpose. Can the Home Secretary reverse this decision?

Like many things these days out of touch not fit for purpose.

Parole boards and psychiatrists have been wrong before.

and right presumably?

Somebody must sign a piece of paper stating that such a person is safe to release. If things go wrong should they not be held responsible?

Were that so, then stating a professional opinion would be dangerous to the professional, and all would refuse the job, and authorities would have to toss a coin to see if a prisoner should be released.

He's been in jail 26 years - if he's not fit to release now he never will be (or maybe only when he's so old & mentally or physically incapacitated that he needs a nursing home).

Capital punishment would have avoided all the heart searching.

Fingers crossed they know what they're doing  (but I won't be holding my breath, too many disasters in the past).

One of the reasons given is "behaviour was exemplary in prison" - hardly surprising, opportunities to rape young women are a bit thin on the ground in gaol, and he hardly sounds likely to embrace homosexual opportunities.

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So How Have They Determined That This Savage Is Safe To Release?

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