HC Deb 20 December 1988 vol 144 cc171-2W
Mr. Cox

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will name the person who reports to his Department on the conditions under which people are held in police station cells or magistrate court cells; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Douglas Hogg

The conditions in which prisoners are held in police stations and magistrates court cells are the responsibility of the chief officers of the police forces concerned. Chief officers are not required to report to my right hon. Friend on the operational aspects of their work, but we are very well aware of their concerns. Strenuous and successful efforts are being made to reduce reliance on police cells for housing people who ought to be in prison.

Lay visitors schemes are operating in most of the London boroughs. Lay visitors have access to police station and magistrates court cells and they may report to my right hon. Friend on the conditions for prisoners held there.

Mr. Cox

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will list the police stations cells and magistrate court cells in England and Wales in which people on remand are held.

Mr. Douglas Hogg

Records of which police stations and magistrates court cells are being used by the police to hold remand prisoners are not held centrally and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost. On 12 December, prisoners were held in cells belonging to the following police forces:

Bedfordshire Leicestershire
Cheshire Merseyside
City of London Metropolitan
Essex South Yorkshire
Greater Manchester Surrey
Hampshire Sussex
Hertfordshire Thames Valley
Humberside Warwickshire
Kent West Midlands
Lancashire West Yorkshire

Mr. Cox

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what was the number of people being held on remand in police station cells or magistrate court cells on 6 December.

Mr. Douglas Hogg

On 6 December, 945 persons, most of whom would have been on remand, were held in police or magistrates court cells in England and Wales.

Mr. Cox

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will list the procedures under which a person being held on remand in police station cells or magistrate court cells can make complaints on the conditions in which they are being held; and how many complaints have been made in the last three years.

Mr. Douglas Hogg

Prisoners may make complaints about the conditions of their detention to the custody officer at the police station or magistrates court in which they are held. Any such complaints received will be reported to the chief officer of the police force concerned. Prisoners may also complain to lay visitors to police stations and magistrates court cells in London, who may convey such complaints to the chief officer via the officer in charge at the police station or court.

Records of the number of complaints made are not available.