Bronson, initially jailed in 1974 for armed robbery, has earned notoriety as Britain’s most dangerous lag.
Britain’s most notorious and longest-serving prisoners Charles Bronson has vowed to “expose” his “unlawful sentence and treatment” ahead of an oral parole hearing.
The 73-year-old has called his treatment a “total joke” ahead of his next parole hearing in the coming months. In a letter to Sky News, Bronson wrote: “I am 23 years over my tariff. I am forever denied progress.
“I am forever kept in solitary. They won’t even take me off Cat A.” He added: “I have to expose this unlawful sentence and treatment. It’s now gone on for far to (sic) long its become a total joke.”
The Parole Board has confirmed Bronson’s next hearing will be an oral one, meaning they will hear his plea for freedom, according to reports.
Once one of Britain’s most violent offenders, Bronson has spent most of the past five decades behind bars – apart from two brief periods during which he reoffended – for a string of thefts and firearms and violent offences.
These included 11 hostage-taking incidents in nine different sieges. Victims included prison governors, doctors, staff and, on one occasion, his own solicitor.
Bronson, who changed his surname to Salvador in 2014 after the artist Salvador Dali, was handed a discretionary life sentence with a minimum term of four years in 2000 for taking a prison teacher at HMP Hull hostage for 44 hours.
Since then, the Parole Board has repeatedly refused to direct his release. His last parole review in 2023 was his eighth.
It comes after a former lag revealed Bronson’s true nature when an inmate began weeping. Noel ‘Razor’ Smith clocked up three decades in various jails after more than 200 robberies.
Noel walked free from prison in 2010 but while recounting predictable tales of Bronson wreaking havoc within the prison system, Noel revealed to podcaster Dodge Woodall that there was another aspect to his character.
He said: “He’s a kind-hearted geezer. I will give you an example. I was in a block… and Charlie was there on the lie down and there was a kid who was next door to us.
“He was about 20 and he was crying all the time – his first time in prison. So Charlie went, ‘Why don’t you turn the f***ing radio on or something or read a book?’ He said, ‘I ain’t got a radio.’
“So the next morning… there’s a cleaner in the block who’s a prisoner… He’s out mopping and his radio is on the table. Charlie walks over, picks his radio up and goes, ‘I’m lending this to that kid. You’ll get it back when he’s gone.’”
Noel revealed Charlie then requested prison guards unlock the young man’s cell before presenting him with the radio for companionship.
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