Advertisement
Hong Kong

Inmate seeking judicial review

Brian Hall says that prisoners should be allowed lawyers for disciplinary hearings

2-MIN READ2-MIN

A prisoner is seeking court permission to lodge the first constitutional challenge to the prison service's policy of denying inmates a lawyer in disciplinary proceedings.

Lawyers for Brian Hall, serving 18 years for trafficking cocaine, said he had faced a total of 85 disciplinary hearings, and had requested legal representation for those he faced since 2009 but had never been allowed it.

Hall is seeking to mount a judicial review based on what he says is the Correctional Services Department's violation of article 11 of the Hong Kong Bill of Rights because his liberty and fundamental rights are at stake.

Advertisement

It follows a Court of Final Appeal ruling in 2009 that denying police officers legal representation in disciplinary proceedings was unconstitutional.

Gerard McCoy SC, for Hall, said the court in England found that when prisoners' liberty was in jeopardy, they must be given independent legal representation. "This case has not arisen before under Hong Kong law," he said. "The applicant has a right to a legal representative in each of the disciplinary hearings in which his liberty is in jeopardy."

Advertisement

Hall, known for his numerous lawsuits and ruled a "vexatious litigant" in 2008, is asking the Court of First Instance for permission to file the application for a judicial review.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x