The council said Wednesday that a commission led to the release of Tracy Connelly, who was jailed indefinitely with a minimum of five years in prison in May 2009 for causing or allowing the death of her 17-month-old son, Peter. He had suffered more than 50 injuries with the extent of the cruelty inflicted on him causing extensive shock and disgust. Dominic Raab Appeals Against Baby P’s Mother Released From Prison – Video At the beginning of a speech to the Commons outlining plans to reform the release system with conditions to stop the release of dangerous offenders from prison, Justice Minister Raab said: “In the light of the release board mandate of Tracey Connelly, I have to inform the house that, having carefully read the decision, I decided to submit a request to the release board to request their reconsideration “. If the board agrees that the grounds for reconsideration are met, Connelly’s case will be reconsidered and a new hearing may be held. However, he generally says “it will be unusual to change a decision”. Connelly was released in 2013, but returned to prison two years later for violating the terms of her release. He then refused to be released on parole in 2015, 2017 and again in 2019. Before Raab spoke, a spokesman for the Parole Board said: “We can confirm that a panel of the Parole Board has directed the release of Tracy Connelly after an oral hearing. “The decisions of the Release Council focus exclusively on the risk that a prisoner could pose to the public if he is released and if that risk is manageable in the community. “Release checks are carried out thoroughly and with extreme care. “Protecting the public is our number one priority.” The council said all professional witnesses supported Connelly’s release as evidence at the hearing, and the State Department spokesman confirmed that the recommendation was accepted. He added that witnesses told the panel Connelly had a low risk of recurrence. Connelly’s friend Steven Barker and Barker’s brother Jason Owen were also jailed in 2009 for causing or allowing Peter’s death. The case has provoked a number of revisions, as it has been described as one of the most serious failures in child protection since the assassination of Victoria Climbié. Peter was on the risk list and received 60 visits from social workers, police and health professionals for eight months during which he was abused. The “Baby P” phenomenon is said to have led to record numbers of “at risk” children being removed from their families as local authorities lowered the threshold to remove a child, hoping it would reduce the chances of death.