HAMPSHIRE-based security contractor Serco has been fined £2.25m for health and safety failings that led to a prisoner kicking one of its custody officers to death.

54-year-old grandmother Lorraine Barwell, was killed in the summer of 2015 by Humphrey Burke, now 28, a prisoner she was escorting.

Ms Barwell was kicked twice, once in the body and once in the head, at Blackfriars Crown Court in 2015 and died from brain injuries caused by the second blow.

She had worked for Serco for 10 years.


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The incident led to an investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) that found that Serco Limited had failed to properly analyse risk intelligence on prisoners and communicate risks and safety precautions to staff.

There was also a failure to have sufficient procedures in place and follow them, to provide readily accessible protective equipment and to ensure further training was provided where identified as required.

In addition, there was a continued failure to adequately staff court activities, manage working hours, assess risks of violence and aggression, communicate safety critical information, have suitable procedures in place and to work in accordance with those procedures covering a period of over three years

In a separate incident in 2016, another member of staff was rammed against a wall and strangled in the Woolwich Court annex which could have had very serious consequences. The alarm button was pressed, but there were no staff manning the annex to respond and so it took time to call and gain assistance from the main building. There should have been 32 of Serco Limited’s officers at court that day, but there were only 22.

On April 25, 2022,  at Southwark Crown Court, Hook-based Serco Ltd pleaded guilty to charges including failing to discharge general health, safety and welfare duties from January 2014 to March 2017.

On May 26, 2023 at the Central Criminal Court (Old Bailey) Serco was fined £2.25m and ordered to pay £433,596.07 in costs.

In a victim impact statement, Lorraine’s daughter Louise Grennan said: "Our mum was a wonderful loving supportive mother to myself, my brother and her two granddaughters whom she adored and loved, and they adored her.

"She too was a friend to many and loved by many. To lose her has left a huge void in everyone’s hearts.

"Mum was my best friend and she helped me care for my daughter. We spoke about plans to move abroad to live in the sun once mum had retired from work. That has all gone now."


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Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Helen Donnelly said: "Serco drastically failed in their duties to protect both Lorraine Barwell and other staff over a sustained period. It is not common to have a case covering such an extended period, but it appeared that Serco Limited were not learning from their mistakes. ​

"Lorraine Barwell and her colleagues were just doing their job and should have been protected from harm. Had Serco carried out their legal duties, these incidents could have been prevented.

"While this investigation has been long and complex, we hope Lorraine’s friends and family will find some comfort in today’s sentence and see that justice has now been served.

"No matter what work environment you are in, health and safety regulation is designed to protect people at work. We will not hesitate to act against those who fail to protect their workers.”