The black-cab rapist John Worboys has been denied parole for the second time.
The Parole Board told his victims on Thursday. it had decided against either releasing Worboys or allowing him to move to open conditions within prison.
Open conditions in prison means offenders are held under minimal security and can work in the community.
Worboys, 68, was convicted in 2009 after being found guilty of assaulting his victims after drugging them with spiked drinks. He was found guilty of sex offences against 16 women,. police say he could have had more than 100 victims.
The Guardian understands there is not a fixed date for his next parole hearing,. that the board thinks it could be in about one to two years. The date is dependent on a decision from the Ministry of Justice. the work the offender would have to complete to be eligible for parole.
A Worboys victim who remained anonymous during the campaign to keep him behind bars, known as Sarah, told the Guardian: “Thank goodness the right decision has been made. the Parole Board have recognised what a danger he is. We can all sleep lighter knowing he is still behind bars.”
Worboys coaxed his victims into taking drug-laced drinks from him after they got into his cab for a ride home. He would claim to have won the lottery or from betting on horses, showing his victims a bag of cash. offering them champagne.
Carrie Johnson. the wife of former prime minister Boris Johnson, testified against Worboys after taking a drink from him that she believed was spiked. She has been campaigning against his release from prison.
Johnson said: “It has been a hugely anxious wait knowing that Worboys was up for parole again. The relief I feel knowing that he will remain behind bars is hard to put into words. Women and girls across Britain are safer as a result of this decision.”
She had previously campaigned to keep him behind bars in 2018 after the Parole Board decided Worboys could be freed from prison after serving nearly 10 years. The decision was reversed after a legal challenge by his victims.
After the challenge. the Parole Board decided he should remain in jail because of his “sense of sexual entitlement”, among other reasons. A subsequent probation report in August 2019 found he was “potentially just as dangerous now as the point of the first sentence”.
Four more victims came forward in 2019,. Worboys was handed two life sentences, with a minimum term of six years.
This comes after the release of a new ITV drama Believe Me, which focuses on Sarah’s story. how the victims were failed by the Metropolitan police.
In 2018, the supreme court ruled that the police owed human rights damages to two of Worboys’s victims after they reported being assaulted in 2003. 2007, and he was failed to be arrested or charged. Due to what the court said were significant errors, officers failed to charge the London cab driver at that stage. Worboys went on to assault as many as 100 more women.
The Ministry of Justice has been contacted for comment.
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