https://insidetime.org/newsround/prisoners-who-maintain-innocence-may-be-lower-risk-says-parole-board/A guilty person who maintains innocence may be deemed a lessor risk over one who admits to their guilt. The article explains why. Inline with the title of this thread, a prisoner does not have to admit guilt to be released, the role of the parole board is to ascertain risk. If by maintaining innocence, the prisoner can maintain/build a support network from family and friends, it could lesson their perceived risk on the outside. It could lesson their risk of re-offending. It could actually work in their favour with the parole board? Advice given? 'Get yourself a good "independent psychiatrist?" - As Kenmair states, LM may have already had one carried out, it may not have worked in his favour? If he hasn't, then why not? If LM disagreed with the reported psychiatric report, it is up to him, his claimed multiple legal bodies (cough), to do something about it.
Therefore, people who maintain innocence, may do so for other reasons and not because they didn't do the crime. Clearly LM has not gained support from his father and brother with his pleas, will the parole board therefore look to that? Bar one person (with the exclusion of SL), there has been no friends standing by his side either, supporting his claim.
Would the actions of his enablers, condoned fully by him, play any part in risk assessment? We know what took place in the run up to this first parole hearing, drug abuse, confrontation, alleged risk to woman? But what of an actual support network of family and friends long standing? So many different factors come under careful scrutiny by the parole board when ascertaining risk with the public.