Prison
officials have been nabbed having secret affairs with prisoners who are serving
term for committing various crimes.
Female
officer Faron Selvage is being investigated after an inmate claimed they
enjoyed secret trysts
A report revealed that Dozens of prison officers have been caught
sharing
“inappropriate relationships” with jailbirds.
Ministry of
Justice figures show 43 guards were punished for being too close to an inmate
in the past three years.
Some of the
relationships were so serious that the officers themselves were prosecuted or
sacked.
Freedom of
Information figures obtained by The Sun show 15 officers were disciplined in
2014, 14 in 2015 and a further 14 in 2016 for forming an “inappropriate
relationship with a prisoner or ex prisoner”.
Some of the
staff who were exposed during the period are believed to have had sex with
prisoners, others had sent explicit texts and letters or met up with prisoners
outside work.
The Sun UK
revealed yesterday how female officer Faron Selvage, 21, is being investigated
after lesbian convict Sydnee Offord claimed they enjoyed secret trysts in her
cell.
While last
month Kiah Andrusjak, 23, was jailed for giving killer con Shane Boyd, 24,
X-rated snaps and showering him with gifts.
The Prison
Service says it has strict guidelines about what constitutes an inappropriate
relationship between staff and criminals, and anybody breaking the rules will
face the toughest sanctions.
However they
have refused to provide the exact number of officers sacked or allowed to
continue working.
Philip
Davies, Conservative MP for Shipley, West Yorks, has called for automatic
dismissals for any officer caught in a bid to halt serious security breaches.
He told The
Sun: “It’s obviously very serious it’s not necessarily the relationship
itself it’s what the position it puts the prison officer in.
“It
compromises them and makes them susceptible to blackmail and susceptible to
helping bring in contraband – it just puts the prison officer in a position
where discipline is harder to enforce in prison.
“There is no
alternative but to weed out officers who get themselves into that situation.
Obviously you can sympathise with people who have got themselves into a certain
situation but that can’t be tolerated in a prison environment.
“It should
be the default position for someone to be dismissed. Unless there are very
unique mitigating circumstances, it’s very difficult to see how you can carry
on.”
In 2015/16,
1,417 staff faced at least one investigation at a rate of 3.1 per 100 staff.
MoJ figures
show that between January 2008 and October 2010, some 126 prison workers were
investigated and found to have had inappropriate relationships with inmates at
jails in England and Wales.
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