Dramatic rise in offenders returned to prison
The number of offenders being recalled to prison after being released on licence in the community has more than trebled in the last five years and is set to increase further according to a report published today by the Prison Reform Trust.
The report, supported by the Hadley Trust, reveals that the dramatic rise in people being returned to custody is one of the hidden factors behind the increase in the prison population which reached record levels this month. It says that in some local prisons they make up nearly ten per cent of the jail’s population.
The report, Recycling Offenders Through Prison, states that the rise is not due to prisoners who are on licence in the community committing further crimes but is a result of tougher enforcement by the Probation Service. The majority of those who are recalled to prison have failed to comply with licence requirements, such as attending Probation appointments.
The numbers being returned to prison is expected to continue rising steeply with the new provisions in the Criminal Justice Act 2003, introduced in April, which mean that many prisoners will be released from jail after serving half their sentence and will then remain on licence under supervision in the community for the rest of the sentence. The report predicts that there will be an increasing number of ex-prisoners being recycled through a revolving prison door pushing up the overall prison population.
Recycling Offenders Through Prison highlights a number of problems that recalled prisoners face and challenges for prison staff working with them:
* Notification and information – Offenders are recalled to prison but left uninformed about the reasons. Basic information is not passed to the prisoner or the prison authorities leaving prisoners frustrated and angry creating problems for prison staff.
* Legal advice and representation – Delays in transferring information mean that offenders are unable to make prompt representations against the decision to recall them to custody. Prison staff are overstretched and hard pressed to provide appropriate legal advice and support.
* Induction and well-being – The return to prison is often unsettling and can cause great distress, yet offenders are not going through proper induction procedures. Last year a number of those who were returned to custody took their own lives.
* Sentence planning – In many prisons recalled prisoners are not subject to sentence planning to enable them to make constructive use of their return to custody. As a result they are simply being warehoused.
The report calls for a review of the national standards for breach of licence conditions so they are less punitive in promoting compliance. It also says that offenders on licence need to be given more support to access services so they can stay out of prison and lead law-abiding lives. It calls for improvements in the transfer of information, access to legal advice and support, induction arrangements and assessment and sentence planning for offenders recalled to custody.
Speaking today the author of the report, Enver Solomon, said:
‘The untold story of the record prison population is the large number of offenders who do not pose a threat to the public but are being dragged back into overcrowded, overstretched jails at great expense to the taxpayer. Prisons exist to protect the public and detain serious, persistent criminals rather than warehouse people who have done their time and need support in the community to rebuild their lives.’ The Director of the Prison Reform Trust, Juliet Lyon, said:
‘The current system for breach of licence and recall sets people up to fail. Arrangements designed to be tough and fair are too often turning out to be punitive and unjust. The startling rise in the numbers of people returned to jail for missing appointments, or otherwise messing up their license conditions, is expensive and counterproductive. The Home Office could better meet its aim of preventing re-offending by ensuring that people leaving the closed world of prison get sustained support and supervision to help them resettle in the community rather than by expecting them to walk on eggshells.’
Notes to Editors:
1. On 20th May 2005 the prison population in England and Wales stood at 75,877, the highest ever recorded total.
2. The number of prisoners in England and Wales has increased by 25,000 in the last ten years. In1995, the average prison population was 50,962. When Labour came to Government in May 1997, the prison population was 60,131.
3. In 2003-2004 8,103 prisoners were recalled to custody for breach of their licence conditions. Over the last five years the number of recalls has more then trebled from 2,337 in 2000-2001.
4. The rise has happened at a time when the number of prisoners serving sentences which include post custody periods of supervision on licence in the community has increased by less than 15 per cent, and the numbers in the community on licence supervision has remained relatively stable.
5. Since the early release programme for prisoners, the Home Detention Scheme (HDC), was introduced six years ago, more than 106,000 prisoners have been released early from prison. The proportion recalled for breach of their HDC conditions has remained at around nine per cent each year. There are currently 3,375 prisoners on HDC.
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