Fourteen prisoners escaped from a prison in the past year including a murderer still on the loose

Fourteen violent prisoners escaped from VERY open prison in the past year including one who murdered teenager and another who stabbed a police officer – and four are still on the loose

  • The violent inmates all escaped from HMP Springhill near Aylesbury
  • Ten have been recaptured but four remain at large including a murderer
  • Critics have condemned how easily the criminals were able to walk away
  • Murderer Ahmet Gomulu, 30, stabbed a boy at a bus stop and is on the loose 

Fourteen prisoners have escaped from a single open prison in the past year, including one who murdered a teenager and another who stabbed a woman police officer, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

The violent inmates all absconded from HMP Springhill near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire – a category D jail that houses about 330 inmates – at a rate of one every four weeks since April last year.

While ten have been recaptured, critics last night condemned the ease with which dangerous criminals were able to simply walk away, despite a warning from the Chief Inspector of Prisons following an unannounced inspection in December 2017.

One of those still at large is murderer Ahmet Gomulu, 30, who absconded in November. 

Career criminal Jason Sufi is on the run

Ahmet Gomulu (left), 30, was jailed for 12 years in 2008 for stabbing a teenager and is still at large. Jason Sufi (right), 39, is suspected of committing burglaries across six counties since his escape from prison

He was jailed for 12 years in 2008 for stabbing Nassirudeen Osawe, 16, through the heart at a bus stop in Islington, North London.

The savage attack was sparked when Gomulu, who police think may be hiding out in North London or Essex, accused Nassirudeen and two of his friends of ‘staring at him’.

Another man still on the run is Jason Sufi, a 39-year-old career criminal known to police since he was 13. 

Sufi, from Coventry, was jailed for ten years in 2001 for a string of offences, including stabbing a female police officer and a machete attack that left the owner of a jewellery store needing 50 stitches to a head wound. 

He had previously escaped from Rye Hill, a category C prison in Rugby, Warwickshire. 

Sufi vanished from Springhill in February and is suspected of committing burglaries across six counties since his escape, including a £25,000 jewellery heist in Epsom, Surrey.

Michael Murphy (left) and Thomas Reynolds (right) are part of a gang of conmen who preyed no pensioners by posing as undercover police officers and went missing last May

Michael Murphy (left) and Thomas Reynolds (right) are part of a gang of conmen who preyed no pensioners by posing as undercover police officers and went missing last May

Michael Murphy, 26, and Thomas Reynolds, 30, part of a gang of conmen who preyed on pensioners across the South East and South West by posing as undercover police officers, went missing last May and are yet to be found.

Jack Murray, 24, who was given an 11-year prison sentence for violent robberies, also absconded in May 2018 and spent three months on the run.

The latest official Ministry of Justice figures show 139 inmates escaped in 2017-18 across England and Wales, up from 53 the previous year.

Open prisons are used by criminals nearing the end of their sentences. As part of the preparation for release they are often allowed out into the community but under supposedly strict conditions.

The violent inmates all absconded from HMP Springhill near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, a category D jail that houses about 330 inmates

The violent inmates all absconded from HMP Springhill near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, a category D jail that houses about 330 inmates

Andrew Bridgen, Tory MP for North-West Leicestershire, said: ‘Open prisons seem to be very open these days but open prisons cannot be so open that prolific criminals, robbers and murderers can escape and carry on their life of crime. 

‘I think security at this prison needs to be reviewed and improvements must be made both there and across the whole prison estate so that these absconds don’t happen.’

Last night, a Ministry of Justice spokesman said: ‘We work closely with police to ensure prisoners are recaptured and those who abscond can expect to serve extra time behind bars in a closed prison.

‘Offenders are only moved to open conditions when they have been assessed as low risk.’

Women prisoners given lavender bags to make cells smell fragrant 

Female prisoners are being given lavender bags to keep their cells smelling fresh and ‘distraction packs’ containing coloured pens and puzzle books.

A report into HMP Eastwood Park, Gloucestershire, details how new arrivals enjoy a ‘room ready service’ where orderlies ensure their cells are tidy.

The report, by the Independent Monitoring Boards, says: ‘During 2018, a ‘room ready’ service was introduced, so that cells were prepared by orderlies for new arrivals.

‘Women were also given a ‘keepsake box’ including pens, paper, distraction items and lavender bags.’

However, the report said that Eastwood Park, which can house up to 440 inmates, needed to improve the choice of gluten-free food offered to prisoners and address complaints about a lack of TV channels and a prison radio station.

At present, inmates pay £1 a week to access TV channels including BBC1, E4 and Film4, but the report added: ‘There were repeated and multiple applications about the limited range of TV channels and the lack of a prison radio channel.’

But one prison worker with more than a decade’s experience said: ‘I’m aware that mindfulness is the new watchword and that colouring-in books are part of that thought process, but I’m not sure it’s relevant to prisoners.

‘Having them colouring in is neither punishment, activity, learning or any real help in the rehabilitation of prisoners.’

In 2017, the Women’s Institute set up a new branch at Eastwood Park where inmates are taught to bake, make jam and arrange flowers.

But last year, an inquest jury found it had failed to protect Jessica Whitchurch, 31, who was goaded by other inmates to take her own life.

A Prison Service spokesman said: ‘These initiatives cost almost nothing and have been shown to improve general safety while teaching offenders skills they can use on release.’

By Stian Alexander

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