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Sunday, 20th July 2008

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Tributes for prison protester found dead



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TRIBUTES today poured in for prison reformer Pauline Campbell after she was found dead near her daughter's grave.

Mrs Campbell first began her campaign for improved jail conditions after the death of her 18-year-old daughter Sarah in Styal prison in 2003.

She then protested tirelessly up and down the country following subsequent deaths at women's prisons – including those of Fylde women Helen Cole and Lisa Marley.

Mrs Campbell, from Whitchurch, Shropshire, was found dead at Oakhills cemetery in Malpas, Cheshire, by a member of the public at 6.15am yesterday.

Today prison reform groups paid tribute to the "single most effective and inspiring campaigner for penal reform in recent years".

Mrs Campbell, wanted improved observation of inmates and better custodial care.

Prison Reform Trust director Juliet Lyon said: "Pauline Campbell campaigned bravely and tirelessly to save other families from having to endure the unbearable pain of losing a child through suicide in prison.

"Her death makes me so sad."

Mrs Campbell's protests led her to being arrested 15 times.

More recently, the 60-year-old was accused of obstructing a road when she led a protest rally at HMP Styal following the death of Miss Marley.

The 32-year-old mother, of Lostock Gardens, South Shore, was found hanged in her cell in January this year while on remand.

After the Crown Prosecution Service dropped the charges, Mrs Campbell, last week told The Gazette: "From start to finish, this senseless prosecution was a waste of the court's time, a scandalous waste of public money and an enormous drain on my emotional health.

"I believe in standing up for principle because it is one of the few ways in which people can make a difference.

"I refuse to bow to pressure and will stick to my resolve to hold prison death demonstrations outside jails in England when women kill themselves in the so-called care of the state.''

Loving

Mrs Campbell also protested outside Styal prison after Helen Cole, 48, of Belvedere Road, Thornton, was found hanged in her cell while held on suspicion of murdering her teenage son Andrew in May 2007.

Frances Crook, director of the Howard League for Penal Reform, where Mrs Campbell was a trustee, said: "Pauline Campbell was a loving mother, a generous-hearted woman and a human being of indescribable bravery.

"Pauline was also the single most effective and inspiring campaigner for penal reform in recent years.

Her uniquely courageous voice will live on, as it must, for as long as injustice remains in our society.''

Cheshire Police said there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding Mrs Campbell's death.

The full article contains 443 words and appears in n/a newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 16 May 2008 7:53 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Blackpool
 
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The wheels have fallen off,

Blackpool 15/05/2008 15:43:55
These deaths are tragic and are clearly brought on by depression. But, if you can't do the time, you shouldn't commit the crime. Making prisons a better place, somehow defeats the object. Stories like this should deter would-be offenders.
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beachcomber,

blackpool 15/05/2008 23:18:58
absolutely it is tragic, but if u commit an offence and live outside the law, you cant cry about it. i feel sympathy for this mother, but her daughter took the overdose, noone made her do it.
3

Terry and June,

16/05/2008 08:08:48
Prison by design is supposed to be depressing! It's not supposed to be an enjoyable holiday camp.
4

A little more understanding...,

16/05/2008 09:51:10
These deaths are scandalous and totally unnecessary. Yes these women clearly have mental health problems but these are ignored instead of dealt with. Prison should be a measure of last resort and not used to lock away ill people who need treatment not punishment. If we are to reform offenders for release back into society then prisons NEED to become 'better' places.
God bless Pauline.
5

100%Blackpool,

16/05/2008 15:21:20
A little more understanding...,

Dont talk rubbish, i'm sorry the lady died but prisons are already too nice a place to be in, people who go there should be locked up in a room and let out for walks once a day, maybe then the crime rate will drop.

Stop the scum running the streets of this country, if i knew my tax was going to making life miserable for thieves and murderers i wouldnt mind paying it. when you hear that they have sky tv and snooker tables it makes a joke of the whole system,

People bang on about human rights but were the people in prison thinking about their victims human rights when they committed the crime?
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John McNicholas .,

Bispham 16/05/2008 19:02:56
100% Blackpool is 100% correct. I for one am sick to the back teeth of these Liberal whingers who are always willing to make excuses for the Feral Thugs and Scroats who roam our streets. Prison should be an awful experience and an effective deterrent, but no people like "Liberty" etc. would sooner give these louts a lollipop and a week in Tenerife then perhaps they will turn into nice people. What naieve claptrap for which we all suffer.
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Bibster,

16/05/2008 20:46:49
100% Blackpool
People were locked up in rooms sometimes 50 at a time in dark dungeons centuries ago and not let out for walks! The crime rate did not drop, even hanging was not a deterrent either, it was not then and obviously is not now. Check the old prison records. There will always be crime as long as we have an unhappy society stamped on by lying and bent politicians, a corrupt police force and the people in power keeping us down at the bottom treating us like the peasants we always will be in their eyes.

Poverty breeds crime
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