Prison Cat B, C, Local, YOI Key Concerns Identified Positive Findings

Pentonville

IMB Annual Report 2023 · Published 26 September 2023

HMP Pentonville, a Category B local prison, faced significant challenges in 2022-2023, primarily due to overcrowding, antiquated facilities, and staff shortages impacting the regime and key work scheme. While the prison achieved notable successes in disrupting contraband and establishing a Neurodiversity Unit with positive outcomes, concerns persist regarding vulnerable prisoner safety, low time out of cell, and minimal resettlement support for its large remand population. Healthcare services showed improvements in patient access and staffing, but overall infrastructure and staffing levels continue to hinder humane conditions and effective rehabilitation.
Population
1,140
Operational Capacity
1,205
CNA (Designed For)
909
125% occupancy
Avg Hours Out of Cell
1.0h/day
Deaths in Custody
1
prev: 3
Self-harm Incidents
487
ACCT Cases Opened
650
prev: 650
Prisoner Assaults
40
prev: 32
Assaults on Staff
16
prev: 16
Use of Force
798
prev: 646
Positive Findings
The prison saw notable success in disrupting contraband through enhanced searching regimes and letter scanning. Improvements were made to the reception and induction process, including better cell conditions. A major new Neurodiversity Unit was established, showing improved outcomes for vulnerable prisoners, and a drug-free wing's recovery program led to successful releases. Healthcare services improved, with a new application response system and successful TB/blood-borne virus screenings. Education attendance increased, and vocational training schemes like the Employment Hub showed positive results in preparing prisoners for release.
Key Concerns
Safety
Vulnerable prisoners held on the Vulnerable Prisoners Unit (VPU) were not rigorously separated from the rest of the prison population, and their safety was potentially compromised.
Safety
The referral of prisoners for a Challenge, Support and Intervention Plan (CSIP) (a tool for managing the more violent prisoners) dropped significantly this year, potentially increasing the risk of violence.
Estate/Conditions
The antiquated and fragile fabric and facilities at Pentonville have not been well managed by Gov Facility Services Limited (GFSL); this has a direct impact on every prisoner’s experience and continues to be a serious concern for the IMB.
Regime/Time Out of Cell
The prison has normalised an hour out of cell per day as the regime for many, and at weekends it is even less time.
Staffing
The key work scheme, where prison officers are allocated to all prisoners to work on a one-to-one basis, has been a victim of staff shortages and the priority of security operations. It was virtually extinguished by December.
Other
Problems with prisoner property on transfer and within the prison continued, causing a huge amount of stress and frustration for prisoners and taking up a lot of staff time.
Education/Purposeful Activity
Low attendance at education and activities was a persistent problem. Only 65% of the population were engaged in an activity at the end of the year (up from 50% in July).
Resettlement/Release
Many prisoners complained to the IMB about communication with the Offender Management Unit (OMU). There was no system in place for logging applications, and a processing backlog contributed to their frustration.
Safety
the IMB remains concerned that young adults continue to be held in Pentonville at all.
Resettlement/Release
An unprecedented 75% of prisoners in Pentonville were on remand. The resettlement preparations for release of many of these prisoners is minimal. The majority were released direct from court without any release plan, after long periods waiting for their court appearance.
Overcrowding
Men were crammed, almost always in pairs, into cells measuring 12 x 8 feet, with bunk beds, a single desk and a chair and a toilet, often unscreened, inches away from where each prisoner and their cellmate ate, slept and spent much of their day. The lack of privacy alone could not be described as decent or humane.
Equality/Diversity
There was a disproportionate use of restraints on black prisoners, on Muslim prisoners and on young adults (UoF statistics, May 2022 and February 2023). It remains the IMB’s view that more research into disproportionality is necessary.
Equality/Diversity
The equality officer left at the end of February 2023, leaving no one with day-to-day oversight to the end of the reporting year. Only three Equality and Diversity meetings took place during the reporting year (when they should have been held monthly). There was a backlog of Discrimination Incident Reporting Forms at the end of the reporting year and prisoners had to wait for months to get a final reply.
Staffing
Gradual changes in the prison population meant that staffing no longer reflected the prison population and the Muslim chaplain was overstretched (another full-time Muslim chaplain could not be recruited until the completion of an MoJ benchmark exercise for chaplains).
Board Commentary
Staffing
Staff numbers fluctuated significantly, leading to regime curtailments and prisoner frustration. A lack of experienced officers was evident, with 60% of basic grade staff having under three years' experience by the end of 2022, although retention showed some improvement. The key worker scheme suffered severely from staff shortages, being almost extinguished by December. In healthcare, agency nurses still constituted about 50% of nursing staff.
Healthcare
Healthcare services showed a slowly improving trend, benefiting from a new Head of Healthcare and 14 new permanent appointments, though agency nurses still comprise half the staff. The 22-bed inpatient unit was well-managed, and a new application system reduced waiting times for GP appointments to within five days. A successful TB screening program was implemented, and the new Neurodiversity Unit provided tailored support with positive outcomes for vulnerable prisoners, despite ongoing challenges with staff shortages for segregation and ACCT reviews.
Regime & Daily Life
The regime remained poor for most prisoners, with many spending only an hour out of their cell daily, and even less at weekends, a consequence of slow recovery from Covid-19 restrictions and staff shortages. Lockdowns, sometimes lasting three days, forced prisoners to choose between education and exercise. Access to indoor exercise was severely curtailed by the sports hall's closure, and staffing pressures limited gym availability.
Applications to the IMB

Prisoners can apply to their IMB about any aspect of their treatment. This table shows application counts by category.

Category Current Previous Change
Accommodation (including transfers) 45 38
Activities/Work 16 11
Discipline 23 20
Food 18 19
Healthcare 28 35
Other 136 123
Property 76 109
Sentence management 42 28
Staff care and behaviour 40 45
Total 538 524
Welfare 114 96
Recommendations (12)
Ministry of Justice: 2 HMPPS: 5 Governor / Director: 5
Recommendation 1
What measures is the Minister planning to take to reduce overcrowding in the prison system, in light of the fact that the prison estate nationally is almost at capacity and projected to increase still further before additional spaces become available under the Government’s prison building programme?
Ministry of Justice Overcrowding
Recommendation 2
Will the Minister commit to provide more funding to HMPPS to allow for an increase in the provision of resettlement services within establishments with a high remand population, given the crucial importance of these to reducing reoffending?
Ministry of Justice Resettlement
Recommendation 3
Will HMPPS give assurance that the population of Pentonville will not be increased beyond the Operational Capacity of 1,205 notwithstanding increasing population pressures across the prison estate?
HMPPS Overcrowding
Recommendation 4
When will action be taken to review the performance by GFSL of its contractual obligations? Its continued poor performance means that conditions for prisoners are neither decent nor humane, and are becoming increasingly less so every year.
HMPPS Estate
Recommendation 5
A move from full to part-time education and activities during the reporting year increased the number of spaces available to the prisoners. However, for the rest of the day they only have an hour out of cell, and those not engaged in education or activities spend 23 hours a day locked up with nothing to do. Will HMPPS commit to providing the necessary resources for the Governor to provide sufficient full-time purposeful activity spaces for the population?
HMPPS Regime
Recommendation 6
Will HMPPS commit to the expediting of the transfer of sentenced vulnerable prisoners from Pentonville to other more suitable establishments, where they can be kept safe and have access to offence-based courses?
HMPPS Safety
Recommendation 7
The new Prisoners’ Property Framework seems to have had no noticeable positive impact on the transfer of property between prisons. Will HMPPS commit to a meaningful, evidence-based review of the Framework?
HMPPS Other
Recommendation 8
Will you commit to a detailed review of the structure of the regime in order to provide more time out of cell for those prisoners who do not attend either education or activities?
Governor / Director Regime
Recommendation 9
Will you undertake a comprehensive overhaul of property systems at Pentonville to ensure that they work effectively to enable prisoners to receive their property in a timely manner (and to avoid the unnecessary waste of staff time)?
Governor / Director Other
Recommendation 10
Will you commit to, at a minimum, ensuring that a system is established whereby applications to the Offender Management Unit are logged electronically and an acknowledgement slip sent to prisoners, in the same way as has been done in healthcare?
Governor / Director Resettlement
Recommendation 11
What additional measures will you take to ensure the safety and access to activities of vulnerable prisoners who, due to a lack of space on the vulnerable prisoners’ unit, are housed separately?
Governor / Director Safety
Recommendation 12
Will you commit to renewing the focus on key work to ensure that all prisoners can benefit from the valuable personal contact that this brings?
Governor / Director Staffing
Other IMB Reports for Pentonville
2025 Published 2 Oct 2025 1,180 565
2024 Published 29 Oct 2024 1,195 610
2022 Published 24 Aug 2022 1,043 564
2021 Published 14 Sep 2021 966 556
2020 Published 9 Sep 2020 1,025 682
HMIP Inspections

Recent inspections by HM Inspectorate of Prisons for this establishment.

16 Mar 2026 IRP
16 Jul 2025 Urgent Notification
30 Jun 2025 Unannounced
11 Apr 2023 IRP
11 Jul 2022 Unannounced
PPO Fatal Incidents

Prisons and Probation Ombudsman fatal incident investigations for this establishment.

Gareth Chumber-Kelly
Self-inflicted · Report published
Rickie Poon
Self-inflicted · Report published
Solomon Bamidele
16 Nov 2023 · Natural causes · Report published
Prevention of Future Deaths Reports

Coroner PFD reports issued to this establishment.

Rickie Poon
· State Custody related deaths
Peter Campbell
11 Mar 2026 · This report is being sent to: HM Prison & Probation Service | Phoenix Futures | Practice Plus Group
Mujahid Adam
3 Mar 2026 · Suicide (from 2015)
Gareth Chumber-Kelly
9 Feb 2026 · State Custody related deaths | Suicide (from 2015)
Khairul Rahman
2 Jul 2021 · State Custody related deaths