The Prison and Probation Service should do more to ensure the legal rights of inmates who are to be placed in disciplinary cells. This is the Ombudsman’s assessment following monitoring visits to 11 local prisons, five state prisons and one immigration detention centre under the Prison and Probation Service.
Placement in a disciplinary cell is the most severe sanction available to state and local prisons when an inmate violates the rules of the prison. It may be imposed, for instance, if an inmate has been caught in possession of a mobile phone or drugs or has hit another person in the prison. Placements in disciplinary cells may be for up to 28 days, and an inmate placed in a disciplinary cell may be in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours a day. The use of disciplinary cells in Danish state and local prisons increased sharply from 2015 until 2018.
‘Being placed in a disciplinary cell is very intrusive and involves a risk of adverse psychological effects. It is therefore important that the inmate knows his or her legal rights and that there is documentation that the decision was correct. In several of the cases we have reviewed this has not been the case, and the Prison and Probation Service should rectify this in future’, says the Parliamentary Ombudsman, Niels Fenger.
Focus on due process protection
Before the sanction of placement in a disciplinary cell is imposed on an inmate, a disciplinary hearing is held. Records are made of the hearing. The Ombudsman’s visiting teams spoke with several inmates who did not understand what took place during the disciplinary hearing. Therefore they did not know that they were entitled to assistance during the hearing and to appeal against the decision. At six of the 17 monitoring visits made, the visiting team recommended increased use of interpreters.
Prevention of adverse psychological effects
The institutions visited by Ombudsman representatives had focus on the fact that placement in a disciplinary cell involves a risk of adverse psychological effects. However, there was a lack of guidelines on how adverse psychological effects may be prevented and what staff can and must do when there are signs that an inmate is suffering harm.
Source: The Danish Parliamentary Ombudsman