Belfast Telegraph

Notorious killer wins his legal battle over prison release terms

- BY ALAN ERWIN

A NOTORIOUS killer who glued his victim’s lips together has won a legal battle over a reduction in temporary prison release arrangemen­ts.

A High Court judge quashed decisions to remove Adrian Hayes from the test programme and raise his security categorisa­tion for trying to bring drugs back into the jail.

Mr Justice McCloskey ruled that prison chiefs failed to properly consider the 44-year-old’s claims that he acted under duress.

Hayes is nearing the end of a minimum 17-year sentence imposed for murdering Co Antrim woman Julie Tennant in 2000.

The 21-year-old victim had been lured to his home in Ballymena, punched to the floor and pummelled about the face for up to 20 minutes.

As the victim lay moaning, Hayes was said to have “super glued” her lips together, later telling detectives he wanted to keep her quiet because the noise was “doing his head in”.

Following the killing Hayes fled to England to stay with an uncle who then alerted police.

Ms Tennant’s body was discovered buried in a ditch.

Hayes, originally from Broughshan­e, Co Antrim, had been on a pre-release testing programme of supervised periods outside jail and scheduled to progress to unaccompan­ied overnight releases.

But in December 2015 he was arrested for the alleged possession of cannabis after returning from groundsman duties beyond the perimeter of HMP Maghaberry.

The court heard how the convicted killer claimed he had the package amid threats made to him and members of his family. Earlier this year the drugs charge against him was stayed due to an issue over CCTV footage.

At the time of the incident Hayes was withdrawn from the pre-release programme and had his security classifica­tion increased.

He has now been allowed back onto the scheme ahead of a parole commission­er’s hearing next month.

But his lawyers issued judicial review proceeding­s against the Prison Service, claiming its original decisions were procedural­ly unfair and unreasonab­le.

They argued that Hayes would now be in an open prison if the arrangemen­ts had been left in place.

Backing their case, Mr Justice McCloskey said: “There was a manifest failure by the prison service to engage with the applicant’s protestati­ons of duress.

“These were dismissed abruptly and out of hand.

“One searches in vain for a clear acknowledg­ement that the applicant was entitled to the presumptio­n of innocence. On the contrary, the persistent undercurre­nt was one of a presumptio­n of guilt.”

The judge also awarded costs to Hayes in bringing the challenge.

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