Sex offender Hadush Kebatu released from prison after ‘human error’

 Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu tried to kiss a 14-year-old girl in Epping (Picture: PA)

Convicted sex offender Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu was accidentally freed from prison because of ‘human error’, David Lammy has said.

Kebatu, an Ethiopian asylum seeker, was jailed after trying to kiss a 14-year-old girl in Epping, near London, in July.

The 38-year-old also sexually assaulted a woman by trying to kiss her, putting his hand on her leg and telling her she was pretty.

Following his conviction in September, Kebatu was wrongly released from HMP Chelmsford on Friday, just one month into his one-year sentence.

He was on the run for several days (Picture: Metropolitan Police/PA Wire)

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Locator Manhunt map for escaped Epping migrant Picture: Metro
He was found nearly 30 miles away from the prison (Picture: Metro)
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He travelled from the Essex city to Dalston, east London, where he was spotted on CCTV carrying an avocado-print tote bag in a library.

Kebatu was arrested in Finsbury Park, north London, yesterday morning while he was sitting on a park bench.

Justice Secretary David Lammy told the House of Commons this afternoon that Kebatu will be ‘transported for deportation back to Ethiopia as quickly as possible’.

Kebatu was due to be transported to ‘an immigration removal centre from which he was to be deported’, but was freed due to ‘human error’.

Lammy said: ‘Concerns were raised about the release to the duty governor, and following checks, staff were dispatched to locate him.

‘When it became clear that he was no longer in the vicinity of the prison, Essex Police were notified and a manhunt began.’

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CHELMSFORD, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 25: A view of the exterior of HMP Chelmsford on October 25, 2025 in Chelmsford, England. Police are continuing to search for Hadush Kebatu, who was accidentally released from HMP Chelmsford yesterday while being transferred to an immigration detention centre, mere weeks into his 12-month sentence for sex offences committed in Epping earlier this year. Police say he was last seen in London after taking the train from Chelmsford shortly after his release. Kebatu, a migrant from Ethiopia who crossed the English channel in a small boat, was convinced of sexual assault and other offences while staying at the Bell Hotel in Epping. The incident fuelled a wave of anti-migrant protests, many of them outside hotels being used as migrant accommodation. (Photo by Alishia Abodunde/Getty Images)
The category B jail has an overcrowding problem, a former ex-guard said (Picture: Getty Images Europe)

Currently, one prison officer has been suspended at HMP Chelmsford.

The deputy prime minister added that an independent investigation has been launched by retired senior police officer Dame Lynne Owens.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesperson blamed the increase in prison release blunders on the Conservative government, ‘having suffered cuts to staffing, failure to build prison places’ and ‘chronic underinvestment’.

About 262 prisoners were released in error in the 12 months to March 2025 – a 128% increase from 115 the previous year, according to figures.

A former prison guard told Metro that wrongly releasing an inmate is the ‘worst mistake any officer can make’, often the result of a litany of failings.

‘There’s not just one point of failure and shouldn’t be put on the officer who was at the reception desk to release him,’ the anonymous ex-guard said.

HMP Chelmsford, he added, is infamous among prison officials for being ‘crowded but understaffed’.

In May last year, 711 inmates were housed in the lock-up, according to a prison inspection report. Inspectors found nearly seven in 10 inmates shared a cell intended for one person.

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