Monday, November 10, 2025 - Another inmate from HMP Wandsworth has allegedly gone on the run, this time after being temporarily released to attend his brother’s wedding. Police have launched a manhunt for 32-year-old Palestine Action protester Sean Middleborough after he failed to return to the Category B prison.
Middleborough had been on remand over an alleged plot by
members of the protest group to disrupt the London Stock Exchange by chaining
themselves to the building’s entrances. He was later charged with conspiracy to
cause a public nuisance between last November and January.
According to reports, prison officers granted him temporary
bail so he could attend his brother’s wedding, but he never came back. His
disappearance adds to a growing list of embarrassing blunders in the prison
system.
Days earlier, Algerian s3x offender Brahim Kaddour-Cherif,
24, was mistakenly released from Wandsworth before being arrested again on
Friday. Footage from Sky News captured him challenging officers about the
error, shouting that he had been “released illegally” and telling them to “do
your job.”
Another inmate, 35-year-old Billy Smith, also freed by
mistake, surrendered himself on Thursday. Photos showed him calmly walking back
into Wandsworth, hands in his pockets, flanked by prison staff.
These incidents follow the high-profile mistaken release of
Hadush Kebatu, a migrant convicted of assaulting a 14-year-old girl, who walked
free from HMP Chelmsford instead of being transferred to an immigration removal
centre. He was recaptured two days later.
Justice Secretary David Lammy has been facing mounting
pressure as the errors pile up. He praised the police and prison service for
working tirelessly to recapture the wrongly released inmates but expressed
frustration with the system, saying his department “inherited a prison system
in crisis.” He has ordered tougher release checks and launched an independent
investigation into systemic failures, including outdated paper-based processes
that are still used in parts of the prison estate.
During his temporary bail, Middleborough gave an interview
to Declassified UK, where he hinted at the possibility of returning to jail but
also spoke about standing in solidarity with fellow activists through a hunger
strike if necessary. He joked about telling his son the real reason he was in
London, saying it was not “by request of the King,” but by the decision of “the
King’s Government to hold me in captivity.”
A government spokesperson has since reiterated that bail
decisions are made independently by judges, not ministers. They stressed that
absconding is a serious criminal offense that carries additional prison time
and urged anyone with information on Middleborough’s whereabouts to contact the
police immediately.

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