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05 August 2011 / Hle Blog
Issue: 7476 / Categories: Blogs
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A bottling plant

Halsbury's Law Exchange blogger Simon Hetherington reports on the inspection of Tinsley House immigration centre

"Hats off to the chief inspector of prisons. His report of an inspection of Tinsley House immigration removal centre is clear and robust in its findings, and exacting and precise in its recommendations. The report is generally favourable, demonstrating the improvements which have and are being made since a previous, harsher report; many of its recommendations seemed geared towards shoring up good and improving practice.

So perhaps it is in one sense unfortunate that grabbing the Guardian headline is the recommendation that people should no longer be taken to the airport as reserve deportees, in case someone scheduled for removal is not able to be actually removed. The report describes the practice as “inhumane”, “distressing” and “objectionable”—as indeed it is. But we must be fair: if Tinsley’s work since the previous inspection is anything to go on, that practice will indeed cease.

What is rather distasteful is the defence made by the UK Border Agency (UKBA). We can’t do better

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Ward Hadaway—19 promotions

Ward Hadaway—19 promotions

19 promotions across national offices, including two new partners

Brabners—Ruth Hargreaves

Brabners—Ruth Hargreaves

Partner promoted to head of corporate team

Slater Heelis—Liam Hall, Jordan Bear & Joe Madigan

Slater Heelis—Liam Hall, Jordan Bear & Joe Madigan

Chester office expansion accelerates with triple appointment

NEWS
As AI chatbots increasingly provide legal and commercial advice, English law is beginning to confront who should bear responsibility when automated systems get things wrong
Businesses are facing a ‘dramatic rise in prosecution risks’ as sweeping reforms to corporate criminal liability come into force, expanding the net of who can be held responsible for wrongdoing inside organisations
The Court of Appeal’s decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys has reignited debate over what exactly counts as the ‘conduct of litigation’ in modern legal practice
A controversial High Court financial remedies ruling has reignited debate over secrecy, non-disclosure and fairness in divorce proceedings involving hidden wealth
Britain’s deferred prosecution agreement regime is undergoing a significant shift, with prosecutors placing renewed emphasis on corporate cooperation, reform and early self-reporting
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