
Violence ‘excessively high' in prisons driven by overcrowding and drugs
Violence remained 'excessively high' across the prison estate last year driven by overcrowding, inadequate mental health support and a surge in drug use, an independent watchdog has warned.
An annual report by the Independent Monitoring Board (IMB), made up of volunteers tasked by ministers with scrutinising conditions in custody, revealed how the issues created volatile environments while the physical setting 'remained appalling' in 2024.
The body reported poor conditions were becoming normalised after years of inaction and that staff have become desensitised to seeing people in acute distress.
It comes as the Ministry of Justice published analysis on Thursday that prisoners kept in overcrowded jail cells in England and Wales are nearly 20% more likely to be involved in assaults.
Of the concerns over violence, the IMB report said: 'This was often attributed to debt, which was inextricably linked to the drugs crisis.
'Population pressures also made it difficult to defuse volatile environments, as it was difficult to separate prisoners in conflict.
'Drugs and illicit items were IMBs' most common safety concern and boards' concerns about drugs in particular rose throughout 2024.
'Many boards described a seemingly unstoppable flow of drugs into prisons.'
The IMB – which looks at prisons, young offenders' institutions and immigration detention centres – said overcrowding also caused violence and drug use to spill into immigration removal facilities.
This is because of an influx of foreign national offenders being redirected there after the end of their sentence, as part of measures to free up prison places.
It cited an example at Brook House immigration removal centre, at Gatwick airport, that drug dealers were believed to have used vulnerable men as guinea pigs to test drugs, with one detainee needing medical help on several occasions.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Justice's research is the first time a direct link is drawn between increased violence in prisons and the overcrowding crisis.
Findings of closed adult prisons in 2022 found inmates in overcrowded cells are 19% more likely to be involved in an assault over a one-year period, compared to those who stay in cells that are not overcrowded.
The document added the true figure is likely to lie between 15% and 24%.
It was published as ministers announced a £40 million cash boost to improve security on the prison estate, including to crack down on drones and contraband with reinforced windows, netting, CCTV and flood lighting.
The investment comes as the National Crime Agency, collaborating with the prison service, National Police Chiefs' Council and regional organised crime units, launched a new initiative to tackle drones smuggling contraband into jails.
Two senior police leads will also join the corruption and crime unit within the prison service to boost work such as organised crime behind bars.
Responding to the MoJ analysis, prisons minister Lord James Timpson said: 'These stark findings confirm what we've already seen – dangerously full prisons lead to more crime and more violence.
'This not only risks the safety of our hardworking staff but means our prisons are failing one of their most important functions – cutting crime.
'We must end this chaos. Our £40 million new investment will also help combat the flow of contraband which creates unsafe environments in our jails.'
Latest figures published in April show the number of assaults on staff in adult prisons in England and Wales per year has reached its highest level in a decade.
Some 10,605 assaults on staff in male and female jails were recorded in 2024, up from 9,204 in 2023 and nearly three times the 3,640 in 2014.
A total of 30,490 assaults of all kinds were also recorded in prisons last year, the highest number of assaults in a calendar year since 32,539 were recorded in 2018.
The Government approved the use of protective body armour for prison staff in high security areas, after four prison officers were attacked with hot oil and homemade weapons by Manchester Arena bomb plotter Hashem Abedi at HMP Frankland in April.
Ministers have also vowed to create 14,000 new prison places by 2031 and have accepted recommendations from the independent sentencing review to curb overcrowding.
This includes changes where prisoners could be released earlier for good behaviour or kept in longer if they do not comply with prison rules.
Latest figures show the prison population in England and Wales is 87,032, down by 1,489 below the record of 88,521, which was reached on September 6 last year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
25 minutes ago
- The Sun
Schoolgirl, 15, ‘raped' outside library in horror attack after being ‘approached by two males' as cops hunt teenage boy
A 15-YEAR-OLD girl was raped after being approached by two males near a library. Cops have launched a manhunt and are appealing for witnesses following the harrowing incident in Surrey on Friday evening. The victim was with a friend when the two males, one of whom later assaulted the girl. The incident occurred around 7pm around Chertsey Library. A Surrey Police statement said: "We are appealing for witnesses after we received a report of a rape that occurred in the area around Chertsey Library on the evening of Friday, 27 June at approximately 7pm. "A 15-year-old girl was with a friend when they were approached by two males, one of whom later assaulted the girl. "The suspect is described as in his teens, with slicked back blonde hair. He was wearing a white jumper, blue jeans and white trainers." Detective Sergeant Mihai Kerekes said: "Incidents of this nature are extremely concerning, and we want to reassure the public that a full investigation is underway to identify the person involved. "Should you have any information that can assist us in identifying the suspect, please contact us quoting PR/45250077899." 1


Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Cafe named after Princess Diana ‘employing illegal migrants'
A café named after Diana, Princess of Wales, could lose its licence for employing migrants illegally. The royal was a regular guest at Café Diana in Notting Hill Gate after it opened in 1989 close to Kensington Palace. She reportedly took Prince William and Prince Harry for breakfast. The Home Office has applied for the café's licence to be revoked after discovering seven staff members without the correct documentation from Egypt, Iran and Albania during four inspections between September 2019 and May 2025. Abdul-Basit Daoud, the venue's designated premises superviser, recalled that Diana first visited the café days after it opened. He said: 'She started coming more often, bringing the kids here sometimes for breakfast. The kids used to take breakfast, like English breakfast. 'Herself, she used to have cappuccino, cake, some croissants, something like this. But she sometimes had English breakfast too.' The café is now a popular tourist destination with photographs of the princess on the walls, including one that Diana gave as a gift. Documents submitted to the council by the Home Office and seen by The Telegraph showed that one employee was paid £40 for an eight-hour shift, equivalent to £5 an hour, while one chef who arrived in the UK on a business visa that ran out in 2015 said he was 'paid in food'. The report also revealed that one illegal worker had been employed at the premises for more than two years. The Home Office report said: 'This prolonged period of illegal employment is significant as it indicates a persistent undermining of the prevention of crime and disorder licensing objective.' The cafe was fined £10,500 in February 2020 for hiring illegal workers and another £135,000 in December 2024 for the same offence. On May 9, 45 tubs of illegal shisha tobacco were seized, and council Trading Standards Officials found smoking had taken place in smoke-free areas. The Home Office report added: 'It is clear to see that the premises licence holder/DPS, along with management, has failed to conduct mandatory employment checks in line with legal obligations to prevent illegal working. 'It is an offence to work when a person is disqualified to do so, and such an offence can only be committed with the co-operation of a premises licence holder or its agents. The management could have eradicated any doubt concerning right-to-work by the simple task of acquiring a share code from potential employees.' The Metropolitan Police asked the council 'to be mindful' in their decision, adding: 'To allow them the benefit of a premises licence would undermine the prevention of crime and disorder licensing objective.' Mr Daoud's company, Corporate Meeting and Event Services Ltd, ran the café but were evicted by SSW6 Holding Ltd which holds the licence. Mr Daoud's company was liquidated in June. Mr Daoud admitted recruiting staff from overseas but said all new hires were required to fill out a starter checklist and all underwent right-to-work checks. Paid with food He also said staff were verbally told which days to work and are paid in cash 'with some receiving free food in return for working at the premises'. Lawyers for SSW6 Holding Ltd said his client undertook 'swift and decisive action' by evicting the current tenants after becoming aware of the issues and suggested suspending the licence for three months. The company proposed hiring door security, carrying out regular immigration checks, and improving CCTV and training for staff. A legal letter read: 'We respectfully suggest that a suspension of the premises licence for a period of three months would represent an appropriate and proportionate response.'


The Sun
40 minutes ago
- The Sun
Killer fumes, tragic suicide notes & rotting corpses bulging with maggots…my life as a crime scene cleaner
FROM blood and bodily fluids to used needles, maggots and mouse-droppings, there isn't much that crime scene cleaner Lauren Baker hasn't seen - or smelled. Major crime leaves a trail of devastation - and once police have completed their forensics they call in a crack team of crime scene cleaners like Lauren. 11 11 These aren't your average cleaners. They are highly trained professionals who clean up dangerous hazards, including everything from airborne infectious diseases and killer drug fumes, to explosives, dirty needles and booby traps. In a new Channel 4 documentary - Crime Scene Cleaners - bodycam footage takes viewers beyond the police tape into the heart of the tragedy. Trauma cleaning expert Lauren brings years of experience to the most harrowing and dangerous scenes in Kent and Essex. 'I had a gentleman in a flat that was a full decomposition and that was quite bad,' she tells The Sun. 'The first thing that hits you when you walk through the door is the smell. And if it isn't the smell it is the flies and the maggots that come with it.' Lauren had worked in a pub and as a domestic cleaner before becoming inspired to set up her own business as a specialist bio-hazard cleaner. And now she's well-known in the business for her signature post-cleanse ritual - opening a window at the end to let the spirit of the deceased person be free. 'I had done a clean in a really grotty property, and the gentleman I helped had been suffering physically and mentally, and carers hadn't been in there,' she explains. 'I thought I could help people like him. So I went home and researched it as much as I could. 'I realised I actually enjoyed the filth and the grime, and I knew there was a market out there. I realised I could help a lot of people through the power of cleaning.' My perfect husband was hiding a twisted truth that led to a bloodbath – police found me in 'worst crime scene' ever 11 11 Toughest job But being a specialist crime scene cleaner is not for the faint-hearted, as they can be faced with murder scenes, suicides and unattended deaths where people have died alone at home and may not have been found for weeks - or months. Lauren, who runs LIT biohazard, says: 'It is a lot more intense and it takes a lot more of a mental strain on you than a physical strain.' She admits the toughest job is to clean up a home after someone has sadly taken their own life. "Obviously they are not your everyday clean up and there is a big story behind them,' Lauren says. 'I remember one of the first ones I went to and it was more of a mental strain than anything. 'We were the ones who found the [suicide] letters, we were the ones who had to take the note off the door and I can still remember what that note said word for word. We were the ones who found the [suicide] letters, we were the ones who had to take the note off the door and I can still remember what that note said word for word Lauren Baker 'Sometimes people do it in such a calculated way. 'We then have to go to the families and tell them what we have found. This one person had emptied bank accounts and left envelopes on the side with money in and named who it should go to. 'They had left individual letters. The note on the door was written in red pen saying 'Do not enter, call 999, there is a dead body inside.' 'That one will always stick with me. It really touched a nerve. You can see how they planned exactly what they are doing, and you can see how they are living as well, which led them to this point, not many belongings, not much food in the cupboards. 'You have got to be strong-minded to do this job. I listen to a lot of music. Sometimes I go home and I do have a little cry in the shower.' Stench of death Whenever people find out what blonde-haired mum Lauren does for a living she gets a barrage of questions. 'It sparks quite a reaction when I tell people what I do,' she chuckles. But there is one question she struggles to answer - what does death smell like? 'You do get used to it. But the smell of death I can't really describe, it is such a distinctive smell,' she says. When I first started I remember going home and thinking I smelled of death... one day I even scrubbed myself in Dettol and had about four showers and I could still smell death Lauren Baker 'We do have strong masks so usually you can't smell a lot of it. But we swear by putting a bit of Vicks underneath your nose, then your mask, and then you are good to go. 'But when I first started I remember going home and thinking I smelled of death. Psychologically because that is what I'd been smelling all day, that is what you think you smell of. 'One day I even scrubbed myself in Dettol and had about four showers and I could still smell death.' Hazardous Crime scene cleaners must wear top-to-toe PPE which is disposed of every day to shield them from dangerous biohazards, like blood-borne pathogens, harmful bacteria and toxic chemicals. Lauren's top priority is always keeping her team safe. She explains: 'My first thought is how long have they been there? Is there any decomposition? 'How bad is the clean-up going to be? We could be walking into a bloodbath. We could be walking into needles everywhere. 'You can have faeces, you can have bodily fluids, we don't know what we're walking into.' In the show Lauren's American counterparts are seen dealing with the scourge of fentanyl addiction and deaths - which pose their own dangers as inhaling airborne fentanyl fumes can cause serious side effects to police officers and crime scene cleaners. We could be walking into a bloodbath. We could be walking into needles everywhere. You can have faeces, you can have bodily fluids, we don't know what we're walking into Lauren Baker But thankfully that isn't something she and her team have experienced in the UK - although they do face different risks on a daily basis. 'There are risks - we have to be vaccinated to do our job,' she says. 'If we have a person who has passed away in his home and he has an infectious disease, that then can become airborne as his body decomposes. 'We have gone into homes and done needle sweeps before and you will be surprised where you can find needles. 'You've really got to have your wits about you and to be prepared for every situation. 'Most of the time people are generally found within three to four days. But you can have cases where people have been sat there for weeks. 'And if that is the case then you get an awful lot of decomposition to clean up and that is when you get flies, maggots, all sorts start to fester in there. 'When someone passes, fluid leaks from every hole in their body.' Strong stomach Lauren's firm also tackles hoarder cleans and mental health crisis cleaning. 'A lot of people who are suffering with their mental health, the first thing that takes a hit is their home,' she says. 'They tend to get to a point where they think, 'I will just step over it,' and then it gets to a point where there is no walkway to just step over but they are so far in with it that they don't know a way out. 'That's where we step in - a messy house is a messy mind. You can't get yourself back on the road to recovery with a messy home. 'It all depends on the person. We have done houses where it has been box upon box of empty cereal boxes. 'A lot of the time these people have experienced trauma in their past, or their parents had lived like that so it was just normal. But some of them find themselves in such a state. ' Alcoholics for example. Sometimes they will urinate in bottle after bottle and keep hold of that. 'They have got to the point where their toilet is overflowing and they don't know how to unblock it so they go in the bottle or the can. 'We have been in properties where we have picked a can up thinking it was empty and it was full of urine.' Biohazard cleaners like Lauren certainly need a strong stomach as well as a strong mind. But Lauren would not have it any other way. She says: 'I absolutely love my job. I'm helping people through cleaning and I wouldn't choose to do any other job in the world.' Crime Scene Cleaners starts at 10pm on Monday 30 June or stream all episodes on Channel 4. 11