She also said “serious thought” should be given to moving him to open conditions. “Of course, I’m talking about a highly supportive community environment and I’m talking about a gradual move into a community environment.”ĭaynes said Bronson, 70, was a “moderate risk” to the public but in the community it would be easier for him to “escape” people who annoyed or provoked him than in prison.
On the second day of the public parole hearing at HMP Woodhill, Daynes, who was not named at the hearing but identified herself in a recent documentary about Bronson, said: “I believe that Mr Salvador poses less of a risk in a community environment than in a prison environment, and I stand by that assessment.
She told the Parole Board panel that despite his past record of offending, which has led to him being imprisoned almost continuously for 48 years, she did not think Bronson posed a risk of serious harm.