

The local authority had therefore to continue its efforts to find secure accommodation. It was clearly unsatisfactory that no secure arrangements could readily be found for her and that she remained currently at some measure of risk, however hard the staff struggled to contain it, in the ordinary residential unit where she was placed. She was not amenable to a psychiatric disposal on the expert report available, but she was unable to be contained in ordinary residential homes. X could be seen as falling between two stools. It would be appropriate to make an interim secure accommodation order to cover the next two weeks the court would then review the situation. There was great urgency, and a secure accommodation order was the only way of protecting X from herself, unless circumstances changed such that a psychiatric disposal became “on offer”. Counsel had mentioned “an old Scottish case” which apparently stated that one should not make an order without an identified unit in place. However, that had simply not been possible here, and both the local authority and the guardian had invited the court to make the order in general terms, leaving it to the local authority, in consultation with the guardian, to place X at an appropriate unit as and when one was identified.

Conventionally, a specific placement would be identified before a secure accommodation order was made. Section 25 of the 1989 Act provided that no child could be placed in secure accommodation unless it appeared that if she was kept in any other description of accommodation, she was likely to injure herself or others. Her adoptive parents felt that they could no longer care for her, and so she was accommodated under the Children Act 1989 s.20 Held X was an adopted child who had shown very challenging behaviour. The applicant local authority sought a secure accommodation order in respect of a 13-year-old girl (X). It was appropriate to make an interim secure accommodation order in relation to a 13-year-old girl who had shown very challenging behaviour in the residential unit where she was living.
