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The Blantyre House Prison Affair - Lessons from a Modern-day Witch Hunt (Paperback)
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The Blantyre House Prison Affair - Lessons from a Modern-day Witch Hunt (Paperback)
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In this autobiographical account of life as a prison governor and
administrator, Tom Murtagh deals with life in charge of the Maze
Prison, Northern Ireland (when he narrowly avoided being killed by
a terrorist bomb) and his move to England that saw him in charge of
prisons in Kent and elsewhere. This is when he was faced with a
remarkable series of events at Blantyre House where a modern,
liberal, ground-breaking and in many respects successful regime was
beginning to attract the attention of reformers, academics and
others. But that regime also masked more sinister developments -
events that should ultimately have received serious attention from
a House of Commons Select Committee set up to look into 'The
Blantyre House Affair'. Only now - and after much reflection - does
Tom Murtagh feel able to tell publicly his side of the affair: of
how that committee chose to concentrate on selective and misleading
information and 'got it wrong'. Despite all the accolades for
Blantyre House, behind the scenes and in reality, the regime was
being taken advantage of by a number of very serious offenders who
had managed to get themselves transferred there such that the
establishment was at risk of being overtaken by organized crime and
corruption, leading to covert police and other criminal
investigations. The book tells how the author acted to pre-empt
this - only to be vilified by HM Inspectorate of Prisons, some
penal reform groups and ultimately the committee. As Martin Narey
the then Director General of HM Prison Service writes in his
foreword, had the author not acted as he did to contain the
regime's excesses it is likely that before long Parliament would
have been calling for the resignations of Murtagh as Area Director,
Narey as Area Director General and also the Home Secretary himself.
"The Blantyre House Affair" is a telling example of how people can
sometimes be swept along by events that may cause them to ignore
those things that are counter or inconvenient to their own aims or
interpretation; of how reality can sometimes be ignored.
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