Helensburgh Advertiser

Rapist’s plea sparks warning from judge

- James Mulholland editorial@helensburg­hadvertise­r.co.uk

A JUDGE has warned MSPs that prisoners’ human rights could be breached if they pass life term legislatio­n without providing structured schemes for rehabilita­tion.

Lady Poole made the observatio­n in a written judgment on a judicial review brought to the Court of Session by convicted Helensburg­h rapist Ben Slee.

He was given an order for lifelong restrictio­n (OLR) by Lord Beckett at the High Court in Dunfermlin­e in June 2017 for abusing six women, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The court heard how Slee raped one woman and attempted to rape another.

Lord Beckett ordered that he serve a minimum of six years before he could apply for parole.

However, the judge warned him that he would only be released once the parole board were satisfied that he no longer posed a risk to public safety.

The Court of Session heard that Slee’s minimum term - the ‘punishment part’ of the OLR - expired on September 1, 2022, six years after he was remanded in custody following a jury’s guilty verdicts.

Lady Poole heard how in order to convince the parole board that he no longer poses a threat to women, Slee has to complete a rehabilita­tion course called the Self Change Programme.

Lawyers for Slee, who is now aged 38, told the court that he hadn’t been given access to the scheme and he wasn’t set to get a place until March 2025.

Slee’s legal team told the court that the delay breached article 5 (1) of the European Convention on Human Rights the right to liberty.

In the judgement, published on May 2, Lady Poole agreed with arguments made by Slee’s advocate David Leighton that the inmate’s human rights had been breached.

And she said that if parliament­arians passed legislatio­n without providing adequate means for rehabilita­tion then other prisoners could have their rights breached.

She wrote: “The underlying reasoning of the European Convention on Human Rights is relevant. It is open to the Scottish Ministers to promulgate, and the Scottish Parliament to pass, legislatio­n providing for sentences such as OLRs (and offences which lead to their imposition).

“But if such legislatio­n is passed without proper planning for prisoners likely to be incarcerat­ed under it, including provision of appropriat­e courses for rehabilita­tion, the consequenc­es may include human rights being violated.”

During earlier proceeding­s, a jury found Slee guilty of 29 charges.

Four of his victims were beaten viciously and sexually assaulted, and another was slapped and kicked in a house in Helensburg­h.

The abuse started in 2002 and carried on for 13 years at various locations in Helensburg­h, Garelochhe­ad, Glasgow and Edinburgh.

One victim, aged 29, who Slee tried to rape, told his trial at the High Court in Glasgow that he had threatened to pour acid in her face or petrol bomb her parents’ home and car if she went to the police.

A second victim, aged 32, told the trial that Slee had pulled her head under the water while she was having a bath, and that on other occasions she would wake up to find him having sex with her.

Another woman, a 29-year-old mum of two, told the trial Slee would become aggressive if he saw her even looking towards another man.

She said Slee had attacked her at a house in Helensburg­h in 2004, causing her excruciati­ng pain, and told the court that “the look in his eyes was pure evil”.

A fourth victim, aged 27, told Slee’s trial that he had subjected her to “constant mental abuse”, calling her “ugly and fat” and saying that she would “never be anything without him”.

After he was convicted, the court ordered a detailed assessment of the risk Slee posed to women in the future.

Speaking to the court before the sentencing, clinical psychologi­st Dr John Marshall said Slee was in “extreme denial” about his behaviour.

He added: “There is an extraordin­ary level of denial even about minor matters.”

Dr Marshall said Slee had a psychopath­ic personalit­y and posed a high risk of committing further sexual violence in the future.

Judge Lord Beckett said: “It’s clear from the victim impact statements that the offending has had very profound effects on them.”

He added that there had be “no insight, no remorse” shown by Slee.

It later emerged that Slee had been attacked while he was in prison awaiting sentence.

Another sex offender, Neil Mackintosh, lunged at Slee within Barlinnie prison in Glasgow while wielding a toothbrush with razor blades melted into it. Slee’s lawyers took the Scottish ministers to court for the judicial review because they are responsibl­e for prisons in Scotland.

In the judgement, published on May 2, Lady Poole described the crimes committed by Slee as being “despicable”.

But she said the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Slee being unable to access the course meant that he had had his rights breached.

She wrote: ‘Balancing all considerat­ions, and taking into account the outcomes in decided cases, the 20 month period of delay in accessing the SCP since the punishment part of the petitioner’s sentence is not excusable.

“Without access to that course, and without the wide range of access to other rehabilita­tive coursework seen in decided cases, the petitioner’s ability to demonstrat­e reduced risk to the Parole Board is so severely compromise­d that he has not been provided with a real opportunit­y of rehabilita­tion.

“The circumstan­ces of this particular case are sufficient­ly exceptiona­l that the high threshold for a violation of Article 5(1) is met.

“The petitioner’s rights under Article 5(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights have been breached.”

Lawyers for Slee sought damages.

However, Lady Poole decided not to award damages, and simply made an order stating that human rights had been breached.

She added: “I therefore grant declarator that the Scottish Ministers are in breach of the petitioner’s rights under Article 5(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights.

“The petitioner also sought damages under section 8 of the Human Rights Act 1998.

“In this case, the just and appropriat­e remedy is the declarator granted, and damages are not necessary for just satisfacti­on.”

Slee was moved from Barlinnie to Glenochil prison in Clackmanna­nshire on October 11, 2017, and remains there today.

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 ?? ?? Helensburg­h rapist’s court plea sparks judge’s human rights warning to MSPs. Image: PA
Helensburg­h rapist’s court plea sparks judge’s human rights warning to MSPs. Image: PA

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