A manhunt has been launched for a migrant prisoner who was released by mistake from Wandsworth prison.
The Algerian convict, 24, is understood to have been serving time for trespass with an intent to steal but has previously committed sexual offences.
The error at the prison in south London happened on October 29 but the mistake was only reported to the Metropolitan Police on Tuesday.
It is unclear why it took nearly a week for the force to be informed and the unnamed prisoner’s identity is yet to be made public.
The Algerian’s release comes after migrant sex attacker Hadush Kebatu was wrongly freed from HMP Chelmsford on October 24.
David Lammy had vowed to increase checks on prisoners being released following the nationwide manhunt for Kebatu, who has since been deported to Ethiopia.
Moreover shortly before the news broke, the Deputy PM was asked during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons whether any more asylum seekers had been wrongly released since Kebatu.
The Deputy Prime Minister, who also serves as Justice Secretary, refused to confirm four times.
Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge then said in a point of order at the end of the session he was reading reports that the Algerian inmate was on the run.
Mr Lammy has since said he was ‘absolutely outraged and appalled by the mistaken release of a foreign criminal wanted by the police’, adding his ‘officials have been working through the night to take him back to prison’.
The Daily Mail understands that the Algerian is not currently an asylum seeker. However, his exact immigration status in Britain remains unknown.
It is possible the man first entered the UK as an asylum seeker and has since been granted permission to stay in humanitarian grounds.
Alternatively he may have entered through a separate legal route, such as on a student visa.
During PMQs, Mr Cartlidge asked: ‘I want to ask him a further very important question – can he reassure the House that since Kebatu was released, no other asylum seeking offender has been accidentally let out of prison?’
Mr Lammy refused to confirm – and lambasted the justice system the Government inherited from the Conservatives.
He replied: ‘Let me just remind him that he was a justice minister that allowed our prisons to get to this state in the first place and it’s now for us to fix the mess that we’ve got into.
‘It’s important that Dame Lynne Owens can now continue her work and understand what is happening. He knows that early releases begun under their watch in 2021.’
Mr Cartlidge then repeated his question. He said: ‘He’s the Justice Secretary. He’s responsible for the justice system. He needs to take responsibility.
‘And I’m going to repeat it once more for the avoidance of doubt, because he did not answer it twice.
‘Can he reassure the House that since Kebatu was released, no other asylum-seeking offender has been accidentally let out of prison?’
Mr Lammy told him to ‘get a grip’.
‘In 25 years in this House, I have not witnessed a more shameful spectacle frankly than what the party opposite left in our justice system,’ he said.
‘Their criminal negligence, on his watch as a former justice minister, they left our prisons on the brink of collapse entirely, threatening to allow offenders to run wild on our streets.
‘He knows that. Rape victims waiting years for their day in court. He knows that. Neighbourhood policing decimated, leaving our people feeling unsafe in their communities, and they haven’t learned a thing.
‘We are tackling knife crime, that’s why it’s falling, 13,000 more bobbies we are putting on the streets, kicking out 5,000 foreign criminal offenders. I’ve got to say, he should do better.’
In a point of order at the conclusion of PMQs, Mr Cartlidge said: ‘The Telegraph are reporting that a police manhunt has been launched for a second asylum seeker mistakenly freed from prison.
‘The question is, can (the Speaker) advise on how I can ask the Justice Secretary whether he was aware of this when I asked him about it repeatedly in Prime Minister’s question.’
Mr Lammy did not respond.
The Prime Minister was not aware of the second migrant wrongly released from prison until the Metropolitan Police announcement, Downing Street suggested.
Sir Keir Starmer’s spokesman told reporters on Wednesday: ‘The Met have released a statement I think in the last few minutes.’
He said ‘one mistaken release is one too many’ and that the case was ‘utterly unacceptable’.
The official could not say when Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy became aware of the release, after he refused to answer multiple questions in the Chamber on whether another asylum-seeking offender had been mistakenly freed from prison since Hadush Kebatu.
The Conservative Party found out about the mistaken release of a prisoner some 15-20 minutes before the start of Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday.
During the session, Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy repeatedly refused to answer questions about whether any other asylum seekers had been released early, apart from Hadush Kebatu.
A spokesman for Kemi Badenoch said: ‘If we knew, one can only assume the Justice Secretary knew.’
The spokesman said James Cartlidge, who stood in for the Tory leader in the Commons, had given Mr Lammy ‘the opportunity to front up’ but ‘he ducked it six times’.
‘In fact, he got quite angry, claimed he’d put in the toughest checks ever – which clearly cannot be the case because another one’s got out accidentally,’ the spokesman said.
The Conservatives decided it was ‘not our place’ to announce the mistaken release themselves, the spokesman said.
Mr Lammy should come back to the Commons ‘and do a statement as soon as possible’, the spokesman added
The Metropolitan Police told the Daily Mail in a statement today: ‘Shortly after 1pm on Tuesday 4 November, the Met was informed by the Prison Service that a prisoner had been released in error from HMP Wandsworth on Wednesday 29 October.
‘The prisoner is a 24-year-old Algerian man.
‘Officers are carrying out urgent enquiries in an effort to locate him and return him to custody.’
It comes as the number of prisoners released in error more than doubled in the year leading up to March, government figures show.
A report by the prison service said 262 inmates were freed by mistake in this period, compared to just 115 in the year to March 2024.
The Prime Minister was not aware of the second migrant wrongly released from prison until the Metropolitan Police announcement, Downing Street suggested.
Sir Keir Starmer’s spokesman told reporters on Wednesday: ‘The Met have released a statement I think in the last few minutes.’
He said ‘one mistaken release is one too many’ and that the case was ‘utterly unacceptable’.
The official could not say when Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy became aware of the release, after he refused to answer multiple questions in the Chamber on whether another asylum-seeking offender had been mistakenly freed from prison since Hadush Kebatu.
This is a breaking news story – more to follow



