After more than half a century in prison, charles bronsonBorn Michael Gordon Peterson, now legally known as Charles Salvador, by Tom Hardy in the 2008 movie Bronsononce again at the center of parole reviews.The 73-year-old is widely regarded as Britain’s most notorious prisoner and his case will be heard on February 18. In the weeks leading up to the review, he dramatically fired his legal team and refused to participate after being told his request for a public hearing had been denied. in a Letter to Sky News, “Fire the legal team!” he wrote, saying he wanted nothing to do with what he called a “funny jam roll,” his term for parole, and asked: “What are they afraid of? The truth coming out?” A new lawyer has since been appointed and an extension secured. The parole board is currently conducting a document review rather than holding a new oral hearing. The panel will review written submissions from prison staff, probation officers, psychiatrists and Bronson’s legal representatives before deciding whether Bronson can be safely released, transferred to an open prison or if the case should proceed to a further oral hearing. No decision has been publicly confirmed. What is clear is that this is his ninth parole attempt.
What the parole board is weighing
This latest review is not an overt spectacle. This is an administrative activity focused on risk. The panel’s task is in principle simple: Does Bronson pose a risk to the public, and if so, can that risk be managed through permit conditions and restrictions? If the risk is deemed too high, he will stay put. The final full parole hearing in 2023 was one of the first public parole hearings in England and Wales after Bronson successfully challenged the secrecy of the parole process, with the board acknowledging improvements in his behaviour. However, it was concluded that he was not ready for transfer to an open prison. It recommended he undergo testing under a less restrictive regime as a step towards possible release.

Bronson in 1997/Sky News
This progress does not appear to have materialized. Bronson remains incarcerated at the maximum-security prison, where he is isolated and locked in his cell for approximately 23 hours a day. The decision to downgrade his security was made by the Justice Department, which does not comment on individual cases. bob JohnsonPsychiatrists who worked with Bronson three decades ago have publicly argued that Bronson received “unreasonable punishment” and called the length and intensity of his solitary confinement “incredible.” Johnson believed that Bronson was severely institutionalized but could cope with the outside world by gaining structural support and income through his artistic work. However, the parole board must weigh that optimism against a long record of violence.
Five years in prison: How a seven-year sentence turned into a life sentence
Bronson was first imprisoned in 1974 at the age of 22 for armed robbery. The original sentence was seven years. Apart from two brief releases in 1987 and 1992, he has been detained ever since. Early in his sentence, he was convicted of multiple violent attacks on prison staff and prisoners in 1975, 1978 and 1985. He was released in 1987 at the age of 34, but was returned to prison just 69 days later for robbing a jeweler. He was released again in 1992 but was jailed a few weeks later for robbery with intent.

Bronson spent more than 50 years in prison/Sky News
The most influential incident occurred in Hull Prison in 1999, when he held a prison art teacher hostage for approximately 44 hours. The teacher was not physically injured but was traumatized and did not return to work. Bronson was given a discretionary life sentence with a minimum term of three to four years, which expired in the early 2000s. He has been in custody ever since as the parole board repeatedly determined he was too high a risk for release. His last conviction was in 2014, when he was sentenced to three years in prison for assaulting a prison warden. For decades, Bronson held hostages including a lieutenant governor, staff and prisoners, staged protests and engaged in numerous violent confrontations. He was moved between numerous maximum security prisons and secure hospitals, including Broadmoor, Rampton and Ashworth. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, he was transferred to a mental hospital for assaults and suicide attempts, and at one point tried to strangle a companion John White. Former Belmarsh governor John Podmore said he had put Bronson in a general cell and worked to curb his behaviour. This arrangement lasted only a few weeks.
Reinvention, Art, and Public Mythology
Outside prison, Bronson briefly participated in illegal bare-knuckle boxing matches and was named Charles Bronson after the Hollywood actor. He has also gone by a number of names over the years, including Charles Ali Ahmed, after briefly converting to Islam, and most recently, Charles Salvador. Popular culture amplified his notoriety. 2008 movies Bronsondirected by Nicolas Winding Refn Starring Tom Hardy, it dramatized his life and cemented his public image as a dramatic, volatile antihero. While in prison, Bronson devoted much of his energy to art and writing. Since 1999, he has published 11 books, including respect and reputation and Madology: In My Own Words. In February 2023, hundreds of his paintings were exhibited and sold, with prices ranging from £700 to £30,000. The works are lifelike, often depicting confinement, madness and despair, but occasionally featuring handwritten messages of hope, including: “God save our dreams. It’s all we have left. A simple dream can get you through all this suffering.” Supporters believe his art demonstrates transformation. Critics argue that performance overlaps with documentation of violence.
Marriage, religion and private life in prison
Bronson’s personal life largely unfolded inside prison. In 1971, he married Irene Kelsey. Eight months later, the couple married and gave birth to their first son, Michael Jonathan Peterson. He married Fatema Saira Rehman of HMP Woodhill in 2001 after she started writing him letters. He briefly converted to Islam and changed his name to Charles Ali Ahmed. When the marriage ended four years later, he renounced Islam and his name. In 2017, he married Paula Williamson. coronation street actress, after she began visiting him in prison. The marriage was annulled in 2018. Williamson was found dead in her home in 2019; police said her death was not suspicious. Bronson has publicly expressed a desire to be released to fulfill what he called his mother’s “last dream” at a 2023 hearing. At that hearing he admitted that in earlier years he “couldn’t stop taking hostages” and described it as “fighting the system”. He told the panel he was “almost an angel now” compared to his younger self.
Is it possible that he will be released?
Bronson has now spent around 52 years in prison, one of the longest prison terms for prisoners in the UK. Spent most of the time in solitary confinement. In order to be released, the Parole Board must be satisfied that the risk he poses can be managed safely in the community. Alternatively, it could recommend transfer to an open prison as an intermediate step. It may also decide that further testing or a new oral hearing is required.

Bronson still hopes to be released one day/Image: PA
The core question has remained unchanged for decades: Is Charles Bronson a man who has escaped violence, or is he a man whose history makes it difficult to believe? At 73, he remains hopeful. In his most recent letter, he mentioned a “liberty party” planned for 2028 and told readers: “Don’t be late.” Whether the party happens depends not on reputation, art or myth, but on the risk assessment that is currently quietly unfolding on paper.


