That’s the ICJ’s term for a court injunction - an order from a judge to freeze a situation, to prevent any harm being done, before a final court finding can be reached.
The prosecution said the existence of "fixed potential ligature points" amounted to breaches of safety laws.In his sentencing remarks, Mr Justice Cavanagh wrote: "At the heart of this case are a number of interconnected failures by the trust."
Both Matthew and Ben's cases featured in the prosecution and EPUT's chief executive Paul Scott apologised, stating it was committed to learning lessons.The proceedings are getting under way after theand placed on a full statutory footing, with a new chair appointed.
It comes 16 years after Ben died."He would have been 36 in September," says his mum. "I think about it all the time."
Ms Morris hopes the new powers will allow the chair to "dig deep" and compel more witnesses to give evidence.
She points out that only aThe temptation for young homeowners is obvious. A longer mortgage term would reduce monthly repayments.
But with the average age of first-time buyers rising - it now stands at nearly 34 - the question of how people will be able to afford mortgage payments when they hope to retire becomes increasingly important.UK Finance, the banking and lenders' trade body, said only 3% of mortgage-holders were currently paying off a mortgage after the age of 65.
While many young homeowners have chosen longer mortgage terms to make repayments more manageable, they may opt for shorter terms in the future if their salaries improve or they move house.That is why UK Finance expects only a small fraction of the mortgages taken out now to ultimately go into borrowers' retirement years.