Essex Boys killer Michael Steeles release blocked

- BBC News

Essex Boys killer Michael Steeles release blocked

Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood is trying to stop the release of a killer convicted of carrying out the so-called Essex Boys gangland murders.

Michael Steele, 82, was given a life sentence in 1998 after drug dealers Craig Rolfe, Tony Tucker and Pat Tate were found shot dead in a Range Rover at Rettendon, near Chelmsford, three years earlier.

In February, the Parole Board announced Steele - who has never admitted the killings - could be freed.

But Mahmood has asked it to reconsider. Steeles release will now be blocked while the decision is reviewed.

The case became known as the Essex Boys killings, and has been the subject of countless TV dramas, films, documentaries and books, which examined its links to other high-profile homicides and the 1990s rave scene.

Mahmood and the Lord Chancellor want Steeles released looked at again on the grounds that the Parole Boards decision was "legally irrational".

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "Our thoughts remain with the families of Tony Tucker, Pat Tate and Craig Rolfe.

"Public protection is our first priority.

"After careful consideration, the Lord Chancellor has asked the Parole Board to reconsider its decision to release Michael Steele from prison."

Jack Whomes, who previously lived in Brockford, near Stowmarket, Suffolk, was also given a life sentence for the murders, but his prison term was reduced in 2018 and he was released in 2021.

Steeles trial in 1998 heard how the three victims were ambushed in a row about drugs on 6 December 1995.

Then aged 55, and from Great Bentley, near Colchester, he was found guilty of murder as well as conspiring to import drugs into the UK.

His minimum prison term was set at 23 years, which expired in 2019, but the Parole Board had been worried about his risk of reoffending.

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