Mr Paul Stinchcombe
April 25, 1962 -Summary information for Mr Paul Stinchcombe
Contributions
2000
5 speeches — Rent Acts Judgment Written Answers February 9, 2000
Common Land Written Answers February 10, 2000
Child Abuse (North Wales) Commons February 15, 2000
2 speeches — Development Plans (MPs' Representations) Written Answers February 15, 2000
Correspondence Written Answers March 3, 2000
Prisoners (Purposeful Activity) Written Answers March 21, 2000
Prison Accommodation Written Answers March 22, 2000
Secure Units Written Answers March 22, 2000
Residential Properties Written Answers March 23, 2000
3 speeches — Prisoner Accommodation Written Answers March 23, 2000
Prisoners Written Answers March 23, 2000
Prision Officers Written Answers March 23, 2000
Prisoners (Voting Rights) Written Answers March 23, 2000
11 speeches — Urban Regeneration and Countryside Protection Bill Commons March 24, 2000
Munchhausen Syndrome by Proxy Written Answers April 5, 2000
2 speeches — Cancer Written Answers April 12, 2000
Insomnia Written Answers April 18, 2000
Armed Forces (Minimum Age of Recruitment) Commons May 17, 2000
ECGD Written Answers June 8, 2000
ECGD Written Answers June 12, 2000
Prison Service Written Answers July 5, 2000
Life Tariffs Written Answers July 6, 2000
Women Prisoners Written Answers July 6, 2000
2 speeches — Prison Facilities Written Answers July 6, 2000
Incentives Scheme Written Answers July 6, 2000
Custody Written Answers July 7, 2000
Prisons (Visitor Centres) Written Answers July 10, 2000
Prison Strip Searches Written Answers July 10, 2000
Prisons (Religious Practices) Written Answers July 17, 2000
2 speeches — Asylum Seekers Written Answers July 18, 2000
Prison Service Written Answers July 28, 2000
5 speeches — Double Jeopardy Rule Westminster Hall October 26, 2000
Rights of the Child Written Answers November 7, 2000
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.