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Twelve more prisoners have been mistakenly released from prison over the past month, David Lammy has confirmed – and two remain at large.

Speaking to Mornings with Ridge and Frost, the justice secretary admitted that there have been further prisoners accidentally freed since he made a statement on the issue last month.

Pushed on how many more people have been wrongly let out since his update to MPs on 11 November, Mr Lammy responded: “There have been two.”

But he later clarified to the BBC afterwards that “there have been 12 [mistaken releases] since then, two are currently at large”.

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At the time, he said 91 people had been mistakenly freed from prisons in England and Wales since April this year.

Mr Lammy told Sky News: “There have been releases in error since I made that statement, but I want to convey that the trend this year is fortunately downwards.

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“There are two people currently at large… and a prison system that is paper-based. Mistakes happen.”

But pushed for more detail on these mistaken releases, Mr Lammy said he doesn’t want to give a “running commentary”.

He said: “It’s important that I release that data in the way that it’s always been released. And it’s also important that I work with police where someone is at large, and sometimes because the police are about to nab somebody, they actually don’t want me to discuss it, and it’s important that they get on to it.”

Mr Lammy also told ITV that the two prisoners who remain at large are not violent or sexual offenders.

Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick
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Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick

Reacting to Mr Lammy’s admission, the shadow justice secretary, Robert Jenrick, said: “Calamity Lammy admits two more dangerous prisoners have been mistakenly released.

“But he won’t say who they are or where they are. When will this fiasco end?”

Following the justice secretary’s admission to the BBC, Mr Jenrick added: “Fifteen minutes later, Calamity says 12 prisoners have in fact been released by mistake, not two.

“Twelve in three weeks. So the problem has got worse since he intervened.

“This is a total shambles.”

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Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride has reacted to David Lammy revealing that two more prisoners were mistakenly released and are still at large.

Mr Jenrick’s shadow Cabinet colleague, Sir Mel Stride, has told Sky News that the justice secretary should “tell us a bit more” about the two prisoners who are on the run.

He said: “I think it is appropriate that he comes forward and tells us a bit more about who they are, what they were convicted for, how dangerous they might be, so that we’re properly informed.”

Pushed on whether it should be for the police to decide to share this information, the shadow chancellor responded: “It seems to me, on the face of it, that if you’ve got two people out there, who have been let go by mistake… then we should know a little bit more about it.”

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Justice Secretary David Lammy revealed the 24-year-old Algerian sex offender released by mistake and located by the police and Sky News was one of dozens mistakenly released over the past seven months.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrat justice spokesperson Jess Brown-Fuller has said it is utterly unacceptable that public safety has been put at risk yet again”.

She added: “The public deserves a full explanation about how this has happened again, and how the government are going to get a grip on this dangerous level of incompetence within our justice system.

“Both the government and the Prison Service must own up to their failures and guarantee that these mistakes will stop happening once and for all.”

Read more:
Lammy to unveil plans to tackle ‘courts emergency’
Mistaken releases ‘could be opportunity’ for Lammy

Some 262 prisoners were mistakenly freed in the year to March 2025, a 128% increase on the 115 in the previous 12 months, according to figures from the Ministry of Justice.

Since then, Mr Lammy has faced a number of high-profile man-hunts, after inmates were mistakenly released and temporarily went on the run.

These include:

  • Hadush Kebatu, a sex offender who assaulted a 14-year-old girl in Epping, Essex and was subsequently freed from HMP Chelmsford on 24 October
  • Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, an Algerian sex offender who was mistakenly released from HMP Wandsworth on 29 October, leading to a nine-day manhunt
  • Billy Smith, a fraudster also accidentally freed from HMP Wandsworth on 3 November

All three have subsequently been returned to prison, and Kebatu was later deported to his home country of Ethiopia.

Following these, Mr Lammy admitted the government had a “mountain to climb”.

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UK takes ‘massive step forward,’ passing property laws for crypto

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UK takes ‘massive step forward,’ passing property laws for crypto

The UK has passed a bill into law that treats digital assets, such as cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, as property, which advocates say will better protect crypto users.

Lord Speaker John McFall announced in the House of Lords on Tuesday that the Property (Digital Assets etc) Bill was given royal assent, meaning King Charles agreed to make the bill into an Act of Parliament and passed it into law.

Freddie New, policy chief at advocacy group Bitcoin Policy UK, said on X that the bill “becoming law is a massive step forward for Bitcoin in the United Kingdom and for everyone who holds and uses it here.”

Source: Freddie New

Common law in the UK, based on judges’ decisions, has established that digital assets are property, but the bill sought to codify a recommendation made by the Law Commission of England and Wales in 2024 that crypto be categorized as a new form of personal property for clarity.

“UK courts have already treated digital assets as property, but that was all through case-by-case judgments,” said the advocacy group CryptoUK. “Parliament has now written this principle into law.”

“This gives digital assets a much clearer legal footing — especially for things like proving ownership, recovering stolen assets, and handling them in insolvency or estate cases,” it added.

Digital “things” now considered personal property

CryptoUK said that the bill confirms “that digital or electronic ‘things’ can be objects of personal property rights.”

UK law categorizes personal property in two ways: a “thing in possession,” which is tangible property such as a car, and and a “thing in action,” intangible property, like the right to enforce a contract.

The bill clarifies that “a thing that is digital or electronic in nature” isn’t outside the realm of personal property rights just because it is neither a “thing in possession” nor a “thing in action.”

The Law Commission argued in its report in 2024 that digital assets can possess both qualities, and said that their unclear fit into property rights laws could hamstring dispute resolutions in court.

Related: Group of EU banks pushes for a euro-pegged stablecoin by 2027

Change gives “greater clarity” to crypto users

CryptoUK said on X that the law gives “greater clarity and protection for consumers and investors” and gives crypto holders “the same confidence and certainty they expect with other forms of property.”

“Digital assets can be clearly owned, recovered in cases of theft or fraud, and included within insolvency and estate processes,” it added.