Sunday, 5 January 2020

Reflections on a Decade

All the festivities now being but a distant memory, life begins to get back to normal. Goodness knows what lies in store for any of us, but as a new decade gets under way, it's naturally time for reflection. First a heart-felt plea from a Napo Branch and an expansive piece from Rob Allen:- 

End of Decade Message

This decade began well for Probation – remember we were a leading world class provider of services. Unfortunately, under that Coalition, we quickly got hijacked/derailed in an unnecessary and unwanted carve up, by he who shall not be named & his bidders. The destruction worked well if that was the plan & probation has never, & may never, fully recover. But we are still here, doing as brilliant a job as our owners & leaders allow us, for minimal reward or thanks in bloody difficult conditions. 


Our CRC colleagues have suffered multiple redundancies having been reduced to the bone in staff & budgets. The NPS continues on a trajectory clearly driven and controlled by civil servants who know or care little about the work, our customers or its demands. You carry on & pick up the pieces, making the most of a bad lot.

So a new decade offers hope. For many colleagues things can only get better & maybe the changes ahead under the amalgamation of case management offers the chance for leaders to listen & front line staff to speak up. Now is your moment to contribute to how things ought to be. If we don’t, alien forces in distant planets will dream up a dastardly plan; resembling a probation solar system far, far away.

So the start of 2020 is an opportunity to try to influence our future, to make our voice heard & rather than “put up & make do” to ensure that we work together to shape a probation service we can once again be proud of.

The branch wishes all members & friends best wishes for 2020. We need more members to step up & make a difference. Please get active………

NAPO East Midlands Branch Exec.


--oo00oo--

A Year - and Decade - of Penal Policy

In a curious symmetry, penal policy in 2019 has mirrored the decade as a whole.

The year opened with then Prisons Minister Rory Stewart proposing to abolish short prison sentences, followed by his boss David Gauke giving perhaps the best ministerial speech on sentencing since Ken Clarke spoke at King’s College London just after the 2010 election.

While Clarke’s plans to reduce prison numbers went with him to the back benches in 2012, Gauke’s seem to have departed with him from the Conservative Party altogether. The new Prime Minister wants to toughen up what he sees as “our cock-eyed crook-coddling criminal justice system”. While Boris Johnson’s sights are set on longer periods in prison for the most serious sexual, violent and terrorist offenders, this could easily have the effect of raising the going rate for a much wider range of crimes.

Sentencing for serious offenders has become more severe over the decade with the custody rate for indictable offences rising from a quarter to a third and the average length of a jail term for all offences up from 13.8 to 17.4 months. But because of falling clear up rates and prosecutions, the prison population is slightly lower now than 10 years ago. Sentence inflation has occurred in spite of the guidelines produced by the Sentencing Council which marks ten years of operation next year and whose impact leaves much to be desired.

Johnson’s line has been hardened by November’s dreadful events at Fishmonger’s Hall which tragically cut short the lives of two inspiring young people involved in an initiative to open up educational opportunities for prisoners. A month earlier, former prisons boss Sir Martin Narey had controversially called for prisons to forget rehabilitation, and with the new government pledging a root-and-branch review of the parole system and talk of shifting responsibility for sentencing, prisons and probation back to the Home Office, the new decade looks set for a repressive turn.

It might have been different. But David Cameron’s hubristic promise of prison reform as a defining, progressive cause for his government disappeared with him and his lieutenant Michael Gove after the EU referendum. While Gove subsequently returned to the May government in other roles, his successors at Justice belatedly abandoned his lofty rhetoric about redemption and instead focussed much needed attention and funds on addressing the major operational crises created by reckless staff reductions and the increasing availability of drugs in prison. Promised new prison legislation has never materialised but controversial measures such as the introduction of incapacitant spray for prison staff are on their way.

Alongside, the probation service, sacrificed on the altar of privatisation by Chris Grayling in 2014, suffered a widely predicted decline in performance, charted in forensic detail by former Chief Inspector Glenys Stacey. In May this year, Gauke bowed to the inevitable by announcing the re-nationalisation of probation supervision.

The last years of this decade have thus been spent on urgent repairs to the largely self- inflicted damage wrought on criminal justice institutions. Had the numbers of people sentenced by the courts not fallen by more than 40% in the last ten years, prison and probation services would have collapsed.

Youth justice has fared a little better- if only because numbers in custody have continued to fall through the decade, with fewer than 800 under 18-year olds behind bars in October 2019 compared to more than 2,000 ten years ago. Black and minority ethnic over-representation among children locked up remains shockingly high and the fall in numbers has not led to better conditions or treatment for those who continue to go to custody.

Much criticised Coalition plans to build a very large Secure College were abandoned after the 2015 election and it would not be a huge surprise if a similar fate awaits the new Secure School due to be opened by Christian charity Oasis next year but already postponed until 2021. Many of the more radical proposals in Charlie Taylor’s 2016 Youth Justice Review were dispatched to the long grass but in the face of decades of experience, the belief in the need for yet another form of youth custody has proved enduring.


Rob Allen

11 comments:

  1. Thank you - curioisity had me looking up that ridiculous quote from Boris Johnson used by Rob Allen.

    In the aricle Mr Johnson and the editor made a very basic mistake about the details of the man's convictions - just showing how out of touch he really is with the reality experienced by front-line Criminal Justice Practitioners.

    I responded to that article but doubt it will be read by anyone as the article is buried deep in the Daily Telegraph's online files so I republished an edited version elsewhere.

    https://essexandrew.wordpress.com/2020/01/05/our-cock-eyed-crook-coddling-criminal-justice-system/

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    1. I came to this article

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/05/19/letting-drug-dealers-prison-go-spa-breaks-criminally-stupid/

      regarding probation as an example of how out of touch with the reality of front line criminal justice system is our prime minister.

      The first think I noticed was a basic journalism shortcoming, which suggests that the editor was also at fault, in that a correction was needed because the main point Mr Johnson was making was simply wrong.

      Before folk who have no real face to face experience of actual criminal justice at the pinch points, start telling those who have how it is and should be, journalists, politicians and especially policy makers need to properly understand what it is like to work within the crazy muddled system that we have been given by piecemeal legislation that looks for good headlines and votes before it considers the actual outcomes of policies.

      That means any changes need to be piloted in small samples, initially in different places.

      We have examples of successful piloting – Community Service, and Probation Day Centres from the legislation, I think in 1972 (I was actually involved with that on the fringes) and more recently, something most will have not even heard of, but is almost 100% successful, Circles of Support and Accountability – for serious sex offenders, from a shared project initially between the Home Office and Quakers in Britain, from the early 2000s – I was a trustee of the Quaker organisation that part funded and organised one of the piloted schemes, that has since become independent.

      We also have experiences of not piloting and muddled legislation which for example led to the timing of the policy changes (as I think will eventually be demonstrated) that had Usman Khan at liberty in December 2019 without the appropriate safeguards in place. I suspect he probably should not have been at liberty or if he was he should have been better monitored by highly experienced and well-resourced staff with the opportunity to react swiftly if changes were needed – in other words not overloaded with work as most probation frontline practitioners are these days.

      AS Hatton

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  2. For the past decade the whole CJS has suffered from shambolic Conservative policies and ideology. Their coalition with the Lib Dems was really in name only. The Conservatives have been at the helm since 2010.
    They've opted for a DIY approach, ignoring professional knowledge, advice and research, and allowed a string of incompetent Ministers to make whatever unqualified decisions they feel like.
    It's now all a total mess with no aspect of the CJS fit for purpose and costing far more to achieve far less.
    I personally see no way back anymore, it's to broken. It's all going to have to be torn down, and a 'newbuild' is required.
    As much as the previous decade is to be lamented so to is the next decade to be very concerned about. No doubt our 'special' relationship with the USA will see a lot of CJ imports coming across the pond post Brexit, but America's CJS is in a worse state then ours.
    It's hard to work out whether to be shocked by the last decade or frightened by what's to come.

    https://www-telegraph-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/01/02/private-security-firm-mounts-uks-first-private-prosecutions/amp/?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15782299183449&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.telegraph.co.uk%2Fnews%2F2020%2F01%2F02%2Fprivate-security-firm-mounts-uks-first-private-prosecutions%2F

    'Getafix

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    1. A private police service is mounting the UK’s first private prosecutions for theft and other “minor” crimes because it claims the police have “given up” taking them to court.

      The private firm, which provides neighbourhood policing to residents, firms and shops, says it has set up a new prosecution unit after its teams have apprehended shoplifters, pickpockets and drug dealers only to be told by officers called to the scene to release them.

      The former senior Metropolitan police officers who run the My Local Bobby service blame cuts in police numbers which meant officers were reluctant to spend time and valuable resource investigating and prosecuting minor offences.

      It comes as an analysis of police data by The Daily Telegraph shows that in some parts of Britain as few as one in 500 personal thefts - such as pickpocketing and shoplifting - are being solved with the criminal charged.

      The proportion charged is down to 0.2 per cent in Suffolk, 0.3 per cent in Gloucestershire and City of London, 0.6 per cent in Warwickshire, 0.7 per cent in Greater Manchester, 0.8 per cent in Kent, and 0.9 per cent in the Metropolitan Police Service and North Yorkshire for 2018/19.

      Overall, for all forces in England and Wales, the charging rate has halved in four years from 2.6 per cent in 2015/16 to 1.3 per cent for the first quarter of 2019/20.

      David McKelvey, a former Detective Chief Inspector with the Met who set up the service with Tony Nash, a former Met borough commander, said the criminal justice system was in crisis with tens of thousands fewer prosecutions and lenient sentences as “old fashioned” policing had been abandoned.

      Their company, TM Eye, started by specialising in investigating and prosecuting counterfeit and fake goods rackets where it says it has brought more than 500 successful prosecutions working with police forces internationally, the FBI and Federal Drugs Administration (FDA).

      It launched My Local Bobby just over two years ago to provide residents, local firms and shops with neighbourhood policing more reminiscent, it says, of “Dixon of Dock Green.”

      However Mr McKelvey said its teams had become increasingly frustrated in the past year by the refusal of police to prosecute the shoplifters, pickpockets, drug dealers they have been apprehending on almost a daily basis. In the past they had handed them over to police who would investigate and prosecute them.

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    2. “Now police take ages to turn up and when they do turn up, despite overwhelming evidence, they will simply take the handcuffs off and release them. We have looked at ways to do it, trying to liaise with police and senior managers in the police,” he said.

      “But what we have done now is to employ a new prosecution team on shoplifting, pickpockets, low level assaults and drug dealing and we will prosecute these offences ourselves.

      “Anyone can arrest and prosecute someone. What you have to do is to meet the public interest threshold and have sufficient evidence to bring a case.”

      They have already mounted a test case prosecution of a shoplifter which is currently before the courts.

      Mr McKelvey claims it could be a “win-win” situation for the police as it would enable them to “allocate resources to crimes that require more police time while at the same time, the shops and residents get an outcome that people want.”

      He said frontline police officers were constrained by targets and resources which meant an officer would be reluctant to “spend eight hours in custody with a shoplifter for £30” even though “that shoplifter is going to go on and shoplift the next day and the day after.”

      He said reasons given by officers when his teams were told to release suspects included that they did not have space in custody suites to interview them, were too busy or ruled community resolution orders were a better way of resolving the crime.

      “One of the lessons that could be learned from police is that we don’t ‘arrest’ people, we gather evidence and we summons them,” said Mr McKelvey. “We don’t have hours and hours in custody where you have to interview them, which is often a waste of time because they just say: ‘No comment.’”

      The company initially plans to fund the prosecution unit out of its own resources, effectively at a loss, until it can establish if it will be successful.

      Its 30 “bobbies”, who are uniformed with red vests and caps, provide cover 24/7 for up to 250 houses on each beat and the firm promises to have a response at the scene within five minutes, all for a fee of £100 to £200 a month per household.

      Its ‘bobbies’ are largely drawn from the ranks of former police officers and military and are accredited with the Security Industry Authority (SIA) with most also close protection trained. TM Eye’s senior investigator is Steve Hobbs, a former Met Detective Superintendent who was lead investigator on more than 200 murders.

      So far it has beats operating in central and North London, with 30 more requests for contracts outstanding. “When we set up My Local Bobby just over two years ago, we wanted to replace something that was missing which is that you don’t see police officers walking the streets. You don’t see any neighbourhood officers,” said Mr McKelvey.

      “We walked around Mayfair and Belgravia and you couldn’t find an officer. My Local Bobby is about having that principle front end presence like Dixon of Dock Green. Residents know who the bobbies are, and the bobbies know all the residents, they know when something is out of place.”

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    3. The National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) said that forces had faced a 20,000 reduction in the number of officers since 2010 as demand from the public had increased but welcomed plans by the Government to recruit 20,000 extra police.

      “Fewer officers and staff...has meant a fall in the number of cases referred to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and a lower number of people being charged,” said a spokesman.

      “An increase in officer numbers in the coming years will help us to provide a better service to victims, and ease the pressure on our people.”

      The spokesman added: “Policing is well used to working with private security companies on a daily basis. These firms should not replace or supplement policing and it is for properly trained officers to intervene when a crime has been committed. Where communities wish to engage these companies, they should ensure that they are properly trained and accredited. We will work with these personnel in the most appropriate way and reports of crime and evidence provided to police by a third party will be assessed and dealt with.

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  3. I think we should be terrified at what is to come. Globally we have a team of malleable lapdogs in harness, with unknown, undisclosed & unseen others calling the shots. Trump, Johnson, Erdogan, Putin - none are the masters of their own party, let alone country or destiny.

    Trump's vision of Dante's Inferno is not his creation. It is facilitated by his fragile, racist ego but designed by far more sinister & powerful creatures who lurk in the shadows.

    Similarly Hitler was the talismanic ego who fronted Nazi policies, but there were significantly more unpleasant individuals who wrote his script.

    Lying. Bullying. Greed. Murder. Power.

    These are the insatiable traits of that thin veneer of globally invisible psychopaths, the sociopathic few who see humanity & society as pawns for their own ends.

    Lying. Bullying. Greed. Murder. Power.

    These are the traits which are poorly & pathetically emulated by the acolytes of the hidden few in a bid to reach out for the dizzy height of 'success'.

    Its the eagerness of those shameless acolytes to please that facilitates the cloak of invisibility, that makes excuses for the abuse, that perpetuates global crises.

    The complete demise of the Probation profession is but one example of the ease with which the nameless, faceless powers that-be can manipulate & engineer whatever outcome they want, regardless. It shows how readily & easily those who are offered a taste of honey will sell themselves out for a slightly bigger pot of honey.

    In terms of today's concerns, Toddler Raab mutters on about "de-escalation" but, to coin a phrase, 'he doesn't have skin in the game'. Even the right-wing press know this. The Daily Mail said:

    "US secretary of state Mike Pompeo confirmed that he spoke to Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab this morning, but not until several hours after the military operation in the Iraqi capital."

    The Malignant Orange Tumour, aka Trump, will be rubbing himself sore with sheer delight at the current situation. He has absolutely no idea what's really happening beyond thinking he's The Donald.

    Sorry folks - I have no faith in or optimism for anything positive happening for a decade or two. These are not necessarily end-of-days, but they are certainly dark times. In a perverse kind of way I think perhaps an all-out global war might, like a thunderstorm, clear the air and move the world into a better place far more quickly & effectively than the faux-diplomacy & weasel words that allow the nameless/faceless fuckers to retain complete control & dictate the world order.

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    1. Tantrum Toddler Raab Shows his true colours on Marr & places the UK firmly in Trump's lap:


      The Foreign Secretary has defended the US over its killing of Iran's top military leader as Tehran ramped up its criticism amid soaring tensions in the Middle East.

      Dominic Raab accused hardliners in Tehran of "nefarious behaviour", described General Qassem Soleimani as a "regional menace" and said the United States has the "right of self defence".

      We're doomed, I tell ye. Doooomed.

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  4. I am certainly pessimistic overall but that Private policing iniative is interesting - I am keen to see how they get on when they mount prosecutions as I think the system is that they can lay an information but ultimately it is up to the CPS to take any prosecutions further.

    I am vague about it and grateful to Getafix for letting us know about the scheme - hopefully the media will keep us infoemed.

    The private police service will be keen to have media attention as that is how they will generate extra business if they are to be succesful.

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    1. This is the firm involved - the website says they have been doing prosecutions since 2007.

      https://tm-eye.co.uk/

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    2. I find the idea of private companies taking on policing and prosecution roles very Orwellian Andrew.
      It's the start of a very slippery slope that can't lead to anything good.
      It's also a big piss off to realise that people are being charged for these arrangements by local councils.

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/01/05/councils-paying-private-police-force-millions-pounds-year/

      'Getafix

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