Prison law: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:


It is good to be reasonably familiar with the different types of sentence as, for example, s47/49 patients become [[s47]] patients on the date when they would be entitled to be release. Also, under [[s74]], restricted patients who "win" their Mental Health Tribunals may, depending on their circumstances, be entitled to a subsequent [[Parole Board]] hearing.
It is good to be reasonably familiar with the different types of sentence as, for example, s47/49 patients become [[s47]] patients on the date when they would be entitled to be release. Also, under [[s74]], restricted patients who "win" their Mental Health Tribunals may, depending on their circumstances, be entitled to a subsequent [[Parole Board]] hearing.
==Relevant cases==
{{catlist|Prison law cases}}


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Parole Board]]
*[[Parole Board]]
*[[:Category:Prison law cases]] - case law


{{Information-footer
{{Information-footer

Latest revision as of 13:43, 20 November 2024

There is an overlap between mental health law and prison law, particularly in the case of s47/49 and s45A patients. Currently the prison law resources on this website are limited.

It is good to be reasonably familiar with the different types of sentence as, for example, s47/49 patients become s47 patients on the date when they would be entitled to be release. Also, under s74, restricted patients who "win" their Mental Health Tribunals may, depending on their circumstances, be entitled to a subsequent Parole Board hearing.

See also

INFORMATION




What links here: