<p>Rashpal Singh, serving a six-year term for aggravated burglary, had served less than two years when he was granted day release from 5.30 am to 9 pm to work as part of a reintegration programme.<br /><br />Prison staff who thought Singh was working as a tyre fitter are understood to have failed to check on where he was spending his time, tabloid The Express reported today.<br /><br />Not a single phone call was made to the company where he said he was employed to find if his claims were genuine.<br /><br />According to The Express, Singh was only caught after a member of the public saw girls congregating at his home with men and tipped off the police.<br /><br />When officers raided the house they found 2,000 pounds cash in Singh's pocket and a large amount of cannabis, a court heard.<br /><br />Officials at Moorland Open Prison in Doncaster, South Yorks, believed he was working eight and a half hours, six days a week and spending the rest of the time travelling on public transport to and from the job 35 km away in Rotherham.<br /><br />But Sheffield Crown Court was told that instead he was using his days to recruit Eastern European vice girls and running the brothel at his Rotherham home.<br /><br />On Thursday he was jailed for a further two years on top of his existing sentence after pleading guilty to keeping a brothel.<br /><br />The Recorder of Sheffield, Judge Alan Goldsack QC told him: "I suspect the public will be surprised you were allowed out so early in a lengthy sentence.<br /><br />"The fact that so few checks, if any, were made that you were actually attending the place where you were supposed to be working will add to the concern".<br /><br />A Prison Service spokesman said: "We don't comment on individual prisoners. Risk assessments are carried out in accordance with normal procedures, including visits by staff to observe prisoners at work".<br /><br /></p>
<p>Rashpal Singh, serving a six-year term for aggravated burglary, had served less than two years when he was granted day release from 5.30 am to 9 pm to work as part of a reintegration programme.<br /><br />Prison staff who thought Singh was working as a tyre fitter are understood to have failed to check on where he was spending his time, tabloid The Express reported today.<br /><br />Not a single phone call was made to the company where he said he was employed to find if his claims were genuine.<br /><br />According to The Express, Singh was only caught after a member of the public saw girls congregating at his home with men and tipped off the police.<br /><br />When officers raided the house they found 2,000 pounds cash in Singh's pocket and a large amount of cannabis, a court heard.<br /><br />Officials at Moorland Open Prison in Doncaster, South Yorks, believed he was working eight and a half hours, six days a week and spending the rest of the time travelling on public transport to and from the job 35 km away in Rotherham.<br /><br />But Sheffield Crown Court was told that instead he was using his days to recruit Eastern European vice girls and running the brothel at his Rotherham home.<br /><br />On Thursday he was jailed for a further two years on top of his existing sentence after pleading guilty to keeping a brothel.<br /><br />The Recorder of Sheffield, Judge Alan Goldsack QC told him: "I suspect the public will be surprised you were allowed out so early in a lengthy sentence.<br /><br />"The fact that so few checks, if any, were made that you were actually attending the place where you were supposed to be working will add to the concern".<br /><br />A Prison Service spokesman said: "We don't comment on individual prisoners. Risk assessments are carried out in accordance with normal procedures, including visits by staff to observe prisoners at work".<br /><br /></p>