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December 29th - headline news - Frank transferred!

On Thursday December 29th, the day after his 65th birthday, Frank was transferred in a high risk security van, a "sweatbox", double-handcuffed, from Long Lartin to North Sea Camp. On arrival, he moved, almost instantaneously, from Category A to Category D conditions - an almost unheard-of transformation from the highest to the lowest security category prison in one leap! In Frank's own words:
...all the way across the country, chained up like a dog, until we arrived at North Sea Camp, where all fetters were finally removed and, in the blink of an eye, I was able to wander about to my heart's content. No walls, no fences, no restrictions - nothing at all.
You can read Frank's own account of the transfer process in his blog account "Beside the seaside".

This move fulfils all the promise held out by the exemplary Oral Hearing conducted by the Parole Board Mandatory Lifer Panel on May 26th. Despite the Prison Service refusing a downgrade to Category C at a recategorisation review held just days before, on May 21st, the Board's decision was to recommend a transfer to open conditions, and therefore a downgrade to Category D. (You can read details of the Mandatory Lifer Panel in Newsletter Number 9.)

(Incidentally, the prison's recategorisation review may have been held in response to a move by Frank's solicitors applying for a Judicial Review of the latest round of the sentence planning process, which had been dragging on inconclusively for months, the prison having failed to provide a clear recategorisation decision since the original review meeting held on October 5th 2010. Of course, the imminence of the Parole Board hearing may also have been a factor...)

The transfer process

The parole process and preparation for release

Life at North Sea Camp

Frank has quickly adapted to the very different conditions at North Sea Camp. He seems to be walking everywhere, talking to everyone, enjoying the open air and the fresh food and relishing life in general - evidence the following extracts from his blog:
There is absolutely nothing nicer than getting up at the crack of dawn (in this case, about a quarter to seven) and making a cup of tea, then going outside to sit on the step with the hoar ­frost decorating the grass and every other surface in sight.
As I sit there in the dark, slowly catching hypothermia, I can see a waning moon in the clear sky above me along with a few die-hard stars that are still glittering for my personal entertainment. Off to my right, in the direction of the dyke that is protecting me from the sea, I can see various navigation lights of vessels, big and small, as they go about their early morning sailings or dockings.
There is, of course, the odd call from a blackbird and the cooing of the isolated ring-necked dove, but the birds won't really get into their stride until daylight. I can even hear the very comforting bleating of a sheep somewhere nearby.
Personally, I think it's wonderful...

It shouldn't be too long before I can start going down to the local town myself - a bit of shopping, stuff like that. I have already applied for my bus pass. I can't wait to get on a bus. I haven't used a bus for such a long time - some time in the 1960's in fact - it's going to be an experience in itself.

...the search will begin for a hostel where I can live in peace and quiet while I write a few things, read a few things, get used to having a dog again perhaps, and put the past quarter century where it belongs - into the capsule of forgotten nightmares, along with all of the other memories that are better forgotten, and concentrate on the future.
The mill cannot grind with the water that is past.