LONDON: Usman Khan, who killed two people in the London Bridge terror attack last week, was a convicted terrorist who had been released halfway through his sentence.

###

Prisoners can typically expect to serve around half of their sentence in prison before being released on licence.

###

They must adhere to certain conditions, which can involve curfews monitored by an electronic tag and meetings with a probation officer and can be recalled to prison at any time.

###

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Saturday there were probably about 74 people with terror convictions who had been released on licence.

###

Their conditions are currently under review.

###

Khan’s sentence

###

Khan was convicted in January 2012 of engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism.

###

He had been part of a plot inspired by al-Qaeda to set up a terror camp in Pakistan and bomb the London Stock Exchange.

###

Khan was released in December 2018 – less than seven years into a 16-year prison sentence – and was wearing an electronic monitoring tag.

###

Britain’s counter-terror police chief Neil Basu said on Saturday that Khan had complied with an “extensive list of licence conditions” following his early release.

###

How was Khan released?

###

In 2008, the Labour government changed the rules on extended sentences.

###

Offenders were automatically released halfway through their sentences rather than being reviewed by a parole board.

###

The Conservative-Liberal coalition government changed the rules again in December 2012 so that those serving more than 10 years could be freed only after two-thirds of their sentence and only with the approval of a parole board.

###

However, this did not apply to Khan as he was convicted under the previous laws and the new ones were not applied retrospectively.

###

What next?

###

Johnson is calling for an end to automatic early releases as well as the complete end of release on licence for people convicted of terror offences.

###

“If you are convicted of a serious terrorist offence, there should be a mandatory minimum sentence of 14 years – and some should never be released,” he said.

###

Johnson also said terror and extremism convicts should serve the full period specified by the judge.

###

Jack Merritt was one of the two people murdered by Khan on Friday. The 25-year-old was a course coordinator of the Cambridge University Learning Together prison rehabilitation programme.

###

His father David Merritt said his son “would not wish his death to be used as the pretext for more draconian sentences or for detaining people unnecessarily”.

###

The Morning and Evening Brief###

The Morning and Evening Brief