header-logo header-logo

09 July 2013
Issue: 7568 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-detail

Lifers’ rights

ECtHR makes landmark ruling on life sentences

Whole-life sentences without prospect of release breach prisoners’ human rights, the European Court of Human Rights has ruled.

The case was brought by three prisoners, including Jeremy Bamber who was convicted of murdering his family at their Essex farmhouse in 1985.

The court held there had been a breach of Art 3, which protects against inhuman and degrading treatment. Its judgment stated that, “for a life sentence to remain compatible with Art 3 there had to be both a possibility of release and a possibility of review.” However, the Court emphasised that its judgment should not be read as “giving them any prospect of imminent release”.

Juliet Lyon, director of the Prison Reform Trust said: “Re-establishing the principle of right to review helps to restore balance to a penal system distorted by the 2003 Criminal Justice Act. Re-instating the possibility of review, albeit with little prospect of release, puts a degree of hope into the lives of those very few people serving whole life tariffs.”

Issue: 7568 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Switalskis—five appointments

Switalskis—five appointments

Firm expands national abuse compensation team

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

IP firm announces new partners and senior promotions across UK offices

Carey Olsen—five promotions

Carey Olsen—five promotions

Carey Olsen promotes five lawyers to the partnership

NEWS
Executors may be overlooking billions of pounds in estate assets hidden in forgotten investments and misplaced share certificates
Britain’s booming non-surgical cosmetics market is operating in what some critics describe as a regulatory ‘Wild West’
Family contact disputes are becoming an increasingly prominent feature of Court of Protection litigation
Material obtained through US discovery applications may have a much longer legal life than many litigants realise
English courts are developing a distinctly practical approach to sanctions disputes arising from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
back-to-top-scroll