Prisoners: Police Custody

(asked on 21st January 2016) - View Source

Question to the Ministry of Justice:

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many times police cells were used to hold prisoners overnight in each month in 2014 and 2015.


Answered by
Andrew Selous Portrait
Andrew Selous
Second Church Estates Commissioner
This question was answered on 26th January 2016

There are occasions, for logistical reasons, where prisoners may be temporarily held overnight in police cells. Police cells are used not due to a lack of space across the prison estate but because it is not always possible to transfer prisoners from courts to prisons in the time available at the end of court sittings.


The number of prisoners held overnight in a police cell has been cut from a peak of over 50,000 in financial year 2007-08.


We will always have enough prison places for those sent to us by the courts and will aim to deal with the prison population in a way that gives taxpayers the best possible value for money. Operation Safeguard, have not been used since 22 September 2008 and no police cells under Operation Safeguard have been on stand-by since the end of October 2008.



The following table shows the total number of prisoners who were temporarily held overnight in police cells in England and Wales in each month in 2014-15. The totals include adults, young adults (18 to 20-year-olds) and young people (15 to 17-year-olds).






Number of uses of police cells

2014

2015

January

168

89

February

372

112

March

175

74

April

64

107

May

46

47

June

112

113

July

274

180

August

116

63

September

62

137

October

96

174

November

149

195

December

111

151

Total

1745

1442


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