The most violent prisoner in Britain has called the prison service a ‘disgrace’ after his parole hearing was postponed until next year, thwarting his plans to spend Christmas with his mother.
Charles Bronson, who was sentenced for armed robbery in 1974 and has been detained for the majority of the last five decades, will face a public parole hearing next year after becoming the first prisoner in the United Kingdom to formally request one.
The parole hearing for the 69-year-old, who is incarcerated at the high-security HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, will take place in 2023 as opposed to the summer months he had hoped for.
Bronson labelled the delay ‘jingle f*****g b*****ks’ in a handwritten letter to WalesOnline, The Sun says, as he expressed fury about not being able to spend time with his mother, Eira Peterson, a former pub woman from Aberystwyth.
He said, “I have given these hypocrites years of good behavior, but they have given me nothing in return.” I am disgusted and appalled by it.’
In the letter, Bronson also questioned whether he would be released by next Christmas, before boasting, “there’s one thing I know for sure: I’ll leave here one day, and it won’t be in a body bag.”
His most recent letter arrives just days after he issued a bombastic threat in a scary letter to a fan.
He stated that the first thing he would do upon regaining his freedom would be to have a “double bubble good English fry-up” and then “go collect what’s owed to me from all the parasites who have sucked off me for four decades.”
The vicious felon concluded his letter, which was published in The Sun, with the terrifying phrase, “Should be fun!” Be lucky.’
He signed off using his current surname, “Salvador.”
Bronson was sent to prison for the first time in 1968, but his initial term was increased multiple times due to his aggressive behavior, which included beating other convicts and holding prison officials and professionals hostage.
In 2000, he was given a life sentence with a minimum of four years for holding a prison instructor hostage in HMP Hull for 44 hours.
Other victims include governors, doctors, employees, and even his own attorney.
The parole board has granted him a hearing, but no date has been established.
Caroline Corby, chairwoman of the Parole Board, stated that the decision to grant Bronson a public hearing was “in the interest of justice” in a document detailing the decision.
Russell Causley, who murdered his wife Carole Packman in the 1980s and never disclosed where he put her body, will undergo the first public Parole Board hearing in the history of the United Kingdom.
He was released in 2020 but returned to prison last year for violating the terms of his release.
The hearing was originally scheduled for October but has since been postponed and is now anticipated to occur within the next month.
»‘Jingle b******s’: Charles Bronson, a dangerous prisoner, rages over a ‘disgraceful’ parole delay«