Two prisoners who disembowelled a fellow inmate at Durham’s Frankland Prison have been given life sentences.
Mitchell Harrison, 23, originally of Wolverhampton, was serving an indefinite term for child rape in Cumbria when he was killed in October.
Michael Parr, 32, and Nathan Mann, 23, cut his neck with a scalpel made from plastic cutlery and a razor blade.
Newcastle Crown Court heard they cut the dead victim’s stomach and planned to eat his liver, but did not do so.
Parr had earlier pleaded guilty to murder and must serve a minimum term of 32 years. He was already serving life for the attempted murder of a hospital patient.
Harrison was jailed in January 2010 after he admitted raping a 13-year-old girl in Kendal, Cumbria.
He was killed in his cell at the category A facility, which has housed some of the UK’s most high profile and dangerous inmates.
‘Cannibalistic urges’
The court heard that Mann and Parr had expressed “fantasies” about beheading other prisoners and cutting out their stomachs.
Mann was described by a psychiatrist as “a remorseless, callous psychopath” who harboured “cannibalistic urges” and was “one of the most dangerous men in the criminal justice system”.
Sentencing the pair for the “ghastly and gruesome” killing, Judge Justice Openshaw said: “I can’t envisage circumstances in which either of them will ever be released.
“They will face the fact that they may well end their lives in prison.”
The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman is carrying out an independent investigation into the circumstances surrounding Mitchell’s death.
A Prison Service spokesperson said: “We take the responsibility of keeping staff, prisoners and visitors safe extremely seriously.
“That’s why we have a violence management system in place to deal with incidents quickly and robustly with serious incidents referred to the police immediately.”
Det Ch Insp Steve Chapman, from Durham Police, said: “Mitchell Harrison was a young man who was by all accounts a model prisoner at HMP Frankland.
“Although his family never condoned his past actions, he was still their much loved son and brother and they were supporting him as he served his custodial sentence.
“His untimely death, and the horrific nature of it, left his family devastated.”
Mitchell Harrison’s family said in a statement: “Our lives have been shattered by Mitchell’s horrific murder. His death was cruel and unnecessary.”
BBC