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  "path": "/2026/06/10/inmate-died-fire-another-almost-lost-leg-spider-uks-packed-prisons-28710136/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-09T23:01:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://metro.co.uk",
  "tags": [
    "News",
    "Politics",
    "Ministry of Justice",
    "Prisons",
    "England",
    "Wales",
    "Lancashire",
    "London",
    "Oxfordshire",
    "spider",
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    "Add Metro as a Preferred Source on Google\nAdd as preferred source"
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  "textContent": "A new report sheds light on the state of prisons in England and Wales (Credits: Getty Images/iStockphoto)\n\nAn inmate at a prison in the north of England died in a fire after an alarm is thought to have failed to go off, according to a new report on the huge pressures facing the prison estate.\n\nThe latest review by the Independent Monitoring Boards (IMBs) covers incidents in the carceral system across England and Wales in 2025.\n\nIt highlights the death of a prisoner in a cell at HMP Garth, south-west of Leyland in Lancashire as an example of a ‘lack of working fire alarms in parts of some prisons’.\n\nIssues with pests and vermin are also flagged at a number of prisons, including a ‘severe rat infestation’ at Feltham in the west London borough of Hounslow.\n\nAt Bullingdon prison in Oxfordshire, there were three reports of spider bites between September and November 2025.\n\nThe report says these were serious enough that ‘two prisoners required hospital treatment and one was warned he could lose his leg’.\n\n##  Everything is changing, all the time\n\nCut through political noise and understand how the Westminster chaos actually affects your life with Metro's politics newsletter Alright, Gov? Sign up here.\n\nIMB national chair Jane Leech writes that the overall picture of prisons shows ‘a crumbling estate and relentless population pressures’ in a year ‘marked by both enduring challenges and repeated upheavals’.\n\nSpider bites at HMP Bullingdon are raised in the report (Picture: Google Maps)\n\nIn her introduction, she says: ‘Procedures supposed to safeguard some of society’s most vulnerable people, instead frequently failed them.\n\n‘Seriously unwell individuals continued to be harmed by lengthy and indefinite detention.\n\n‘Behind closed doors, force was used disproportionately.’\n\nAndrea Coomber, chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said the report ‘reveals the gulf between the rhetoric we hear in Westminster and the reality we see in overwhelmed and under-resourced jails up and down the country’.\n\nShe said the campaign group had been ‘sounding the alarm for many years, but that governments have been ‘too slow to respond to the warning signs and too eager to add to the sentence inflation that has brought the system to the brink of collapse’.\n\nIndividual IMBs are placed in every prison, short-term holding facility and immigration removal centre in England and Wales to monitor the treatment of those in custody.\n\nA separate body with the same name does the job in Northern Ireland, while Independent Prison Monitors (IPMs) carry out the work in Scotland.\n\nPrisons minister Lord James Timpson (Photo by Ben Whitley-WPA Pool/Getty Images)\n\nThe new IMB report also highlights issues at several of the Young Offender Institutes in England and Wales, which hold young men aged 15 to 21.\n\nIt found ‘many boys’ carried weapons, with particular concern over those made using ‘sharp pieces of metal taken from laptop components’.\n\nAt Feltham, 50 weapons were found in August alone – despite the facility only holding a population of around 100 boys.\n\nPrisons Minister Lord Timpson said: ‘We have seen positive improvements across the estate thanks to strong leadership, but we know more needs to be done.\n\n‘Whether it’s keeping the public safe by creating 3,000 more prison places, investing over half a billion in vital maintenance and security, or recruiting hundreds more officers, we are pulling every lever to turn the tide.\n\n‘To meet the challenge, our landmark sentencing reforms, alongside £4bn for 14,000 new prison places by 2031, will ease pressure, and we are tackling violence and drugs behind bars with over £40m invested in physical security to clamp down on contraband.’\n\n******Get in touch with our news team by emailing us atwebnews@metro.co.uk.******\n\n**For more stories like this,** check our news page.\n\nComment now Comments \nAdd Metro as a Preferred Source on Google\nAdd as preferred source\n",
  "title": "Inmate died in fire and another almost lost leg to spider in UK’s packed prisons"
}