Monday 19 April 2021

Talking Sense

Now here's a funny thing. With charities like Nacro having long been neutered in terms of campaigning for fear of jeopardising CJS contracting opportunities, probation now tightly in the grip of MoJ control and unions essentially silenced under civil service employment rules, who can we look to for any common sense regarding penal policy and social justice? Why the police of course because thankfully they do still have a degree of independence. This from yesterday:- 

Tackle poverty and inequality to reduce crime, says police chief

Cutting poverty and inequality is the best way to reduce crime, a police chief has said, calling for more money for deprived areas to thwart criminals’ attempts to recruit those left desperate by deprivation.

In an unusually frank interview for a senior officer, given to mark his retirement as chief constable of Merseyside police, Andy Cooke said that if he was given £5bn to cut crime, he would put £1bn into law enforcement and £4bn into tackling poverty. Cooke, who has started a new role as head of the inspectorate of constabulary, said that in his experience most criminals, including those committing serious violence, were not inherently bad.

“The best crime prevention is increased opportunity and reduced poverty. That’s the best way to reduce crime. So there needs to be substantial funding into the infrastructure of our inner cities and our more deprived areas. Why do people get involved in crime and serious crime? It’s because the opportunities to make money elsewhere aren’t there for them. And never more so than in our inner cities and in our more difficult to police areas. We need to reduce that deprivation and the scale of deprivation that we see in some of our communities, because if you give people a viable alternative, not all but a lot will take it.”

He said children educated at “some of our tough schools” needed something to look forward to other than a life of crime, and that opportunities for apprenticeships needed to be increased. “If we don’t do that, then policing will always be on the back foot,” he said.

Asked what he would do if he were given £5bn to cut crime, Cooke said reducing inequality and deprivation should be the priority: 

“I’d put a billion into law enforcement and the rest into reducing poverty and increasing opportunity. Plenty of entrepreneurial skills get lost in our inner city communities or get directed into the wrong things. If you give [someone] a legal opportunity to actually earn money, a legal opportunity to actually have a good standard of living, a number of people would take that because they know they can sleep in their beds at night … they don’t have to worry about what’s happening with the kids and what’s happening with their families and the doors going through at seven in the morning.”

Cooke’s route from chief of Merseyside to Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services mirrors that of Bernard Hogan-Howe, who eventually became commissioner of the Metropolitan police. Under Cooke, the Merseyside force gained a reputation for tough policing. It was a keen user of stop-and-search powers, and he was the first commander of Merseyside’s Matrix unit, set up to tackle gang crime and violence.

But he said the police, courts and criminal justice system could not simply scare people into not offending. He said such an approach taken in the US had led to “ridiculous prison sentences as deterrence, and all they end up doing is building more prisons, and you don’t see reduction in firearms crime or a reduction in murders over there”. Tough enforcement and social and economic justice need to go hand in hand, he said.

“The solution is building community cohesion,” he said. “The solution is building the opportunities for young people, and levelling up the playing field. It’s such an unequal playing field we have at the moment with job prospects, and with opportunities for the future. There’s got to be some levelling up.”

Cooke’s views about the relationship between deprivation and offending comes after 11 years of Conservative government, which critics say has widened inequalities. Police chiefs usually keep such views private. He also said aspiration needed to be boosted to prevent hopelessness cascading from one generation to the next. “It’s linked to deprivation issues, but because Liverpool particularly, is so predominantly white working class, there are low levels of attainment, there are low levels of academic achievement and low levels of aspiration, and aspiration is one of the key problems.”

The aspiration gap had to be closed, he said: “There is a massive gap. If your father hasn’t got a job, and your grandfather hasn’t got a job or if those jobs are particularly poorly paid … what’s the aspiration to achieve? Some families do [achieve]. It’s not right across the board. Some families do it, some individuals do it. But vast swathes now, they’ll go to school, they’ll leave with no qualification and they’ll have no prospect of gainful employment. Something’s got to change in relation to that.”

Cooke’s replacement is Serena Kennedy, the first female chief constable of Merseyside.

20 comments:

  1. I think the role reversal between police and probation services in the last decade has been enormous.
    In part the police service has had to change its approach to policing. Inherently racist, arrest first and ask questions later, get convictions by whatever means, are all unsavoury labels attached to the police that they've needed to wash off. I don't think the job has been completed yet, but I do think they're working hard at it, and approaching their work in a far more prosocial way then ever before.
    I commend Cooke for his views, and for taking this opertuity to express them. Policing in the past has become far to responsive, dealing with a crime once its happened, and not really doing much to help prevent it in the first place.
    I feel there's a difference, a big difference, between an agency performing a 'function' for the state, and an agency performing a public service.
    Sadly, I feel probation is now an agency that performs a 'function' for the state (for many different reasons) whilst the police are actually being able to take on a far more public service ethos they they ever have before.
    Whilst on the subject of the police talking sense, I'll take this opertuity to highlight another police officer that I feel makes absolute sense in this very personal article from the Guardian a little while back.

    https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/society/2016/aug/26/neil-woods-undercover-cop-who-abandoned-the-war-on-drugs?amp_js_v=a6&amp_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQHKAFQArABIA%3D%3D#aoh=16188158339665&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fsociety%2F2016%2Faug%2F26%2Fneil-woods-undercover-cop-who-abandoned-the-war-on-drugs

    'Getafix

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    1. ‘I’ve done really bad things’: The undercover cop who abandoned the war on drugs

      Walking beside me through a market town centre is a lean, healthy, 46-year-old man. “So, you wanted me to show you how I used to look?” He draws in his stomach, rounds his shoulders, paws imaginary sweat from his cheeks, and suddenly I’m looking at a junkie – jumpy, wheedling, begging for a fix. “And this is how you walk when you’re going to score heroin.” Subtly hunched over a sunken midriff, he strides ahead, as fast as he can without breaking into a run. “It’s all in the stomach,” he grins when I’ve caught up. “It’s all about stomach cramps.”

      For 14 years, Neil Woods would leave behind his wife and two young children, put on stained “charity-shop scally tracksuit bottoms”, and turn up in a town somewhere in England as a drug addict. “I was a sponge for colloquialisms and mannerisms. Street slang is very regionalised, even just specific to a town, so you have to adapt quite quickly. The biggest danger at the start of any job is that you’ve landed from Mars – and who are you?” Using a new cover story each time, the undercover drugs squad officer would gradually befriend destitute addicts, ingratiate himself with their dealers, buy drugs from them – and then have the whole lot sent to jail.

      It’s a struggle to reconcile the faux junkie Woods used to be with the articulate ex-policeman taking me for tea and cakes. “Oh, but I loved the art of deception,” he offers. “And I loved the development of the skill. It’s a great thrill to be able to successfully deceive people. Particularly when it’s dangerous.” The dangers grew every year, as dealers cottoned on to undercover police tactics, and grew increasingly suspicious of a new face asking for drugs. One dealer tried to run Woods over, another held a knife to his groin, another pulled a 9mm Glock handgun on him. But the commendation awards kept piling up. Woods even helped formulate national guidelines for undercover operations, and trained officers all over the country in his skills. By his calculation, he consigned drug offenders to more than 1,000 years behind bars.

      He did feel guilty about jailing the hapless addicts who led him to the dealers. “But I told myself I was fighting the good fight, and that the ends justified the means.” This moral justification seemed more compelling with each new assignment, due to the ever-escalating violence deployed by dealers to deter communities from talking to the police. In Northampton, Woods discovered a chilling new punishment for informants – gang rape of a girlfriend or sister – and every heroin addict in Brighton warned him that if the local dealers thought he had talked, the next hit of heroin he bought would kill him. Woods had wondered why heroin fatalities in Brighton were five times the national average. This wasn’t an overdose epidemic, he realised, but dealers literally getting away with murder, making their victims’ deaths look like just another accidental overdose.

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    2. It was then that the epiphany dawned. “Every year the police get better at catching drug gangs, and the gangsters’ most effective way of fighting back is upping the use of fear and intimidation against potential informants. The most efficient way to stop people grassing them up is to be terrifying. In other words, organised crime groups were getting nastier and nastier as a direct result of what I was doing.”

      The only dealers the drug squad could reliably catch, he saw, were “low-hanging fruit” – the small-fry dealers, and harmless addicts trying to pay for their habit by selling a bit, who an informant could report with no fear of retribution. “It’s why organised crime is increasingly becoming monopolised, because the most successful organised crime groups are the ones that can be the most terrifying.” Like cold-war nations seeking security in Nato or the Warsaw Pact, small-town dealers are being absorbed into large city gangs. “It’s a classic arms race. Although at least with the cold war you could knock a wall down, and de-escalate it. There’s no wall to knock down with the war on drugs, is there? Brighton is the thin edge of the same wedge destroying Mexico. Mexico’s just the thicker end of it, but it can only go in one direction.”

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    3. Getafix puts his/her finger on the pulse with "probation is now an agency that performs a 'function' for the state".

      As civil servants, probation staff are obliged to fulfil the wishes of the serving government.

      This particular government wants to weaponise class, race & any other means of oppression of the population. Divide & Rule is their MO, their modus operandi.

      Risk, Fear & Danger are the watchwords, the key performance indicators that the govt will exploit & NPS will obediently pay attention to.

      * Risk management is the task you will be judged on.

      * Fear is the yardstick the public will judge you by; a means of subjective measurement provided free-of-charge by the government via the ever-hungry media.

      * Danger to the public is the consequence you will be held accountable for.

      You are paid for by the public purse. You are accountable to the government of the day. You are not independent in any sense.

      You. Are. Fucked.

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  2. Methinks Nacro neutered themselves:

    * Statement from Paul McDowell on leaving Nacro published on 12 Nov 2013 by nacro in Nacro news *

    Paul McDowell, Nacro’s Chief Executive, has accepted an offer to become the next Chief Inspector of Probation, and will therefore be leaving Nacro at the conclusion of his notice period on 17 February 2014. Paul McDowell said:

    “I very much look forward to becoming HM Chief Inspector of Probation. The independent inspection of probation services is vital to ensure that interventions and engagement are of the highest quality and are effective in reducing reoffending."

    * Then on 2 Feb 2015 in Civil Service World *

    "Paul McDowell quits following concerns over bidding contracts with his wife’s company

    The chief inspector of probation Paul McDowell has resigned over criticism of his personal relationship with Ministry of Justice outsourcing bidder Sodexo-Nacro.

    His resignation comes after questions were raised regarding a conflict of interest with the announcement of a Sodexo-Nacro partnership as the preferred bidder for a majority of contracts in a £450 million a year contract for outsourcing of the probation service.

    Previously, Mr McDowell worked as chief executive for Nacro, the crime reduction charity. His wife, Janine McDowell, is Sodexo Justice Services' deputy managing director."

    The "previously" referred to was the period immediately preceding his appointment to HMI Probation, a time when the Sodexo/Nacro partnership was being forged, when the bids were submitted.

    Mrs McDowell pocketed a huge cash windfall from the success of the Sodexo bid when contracts were finalised in December 2014.

    Grayling's choice to lead HMI Probation was as pisspoor as any other decision and, of course, it was something he defended to the last; but McDowell had had enough and, presumably after Mrs McDowell's generous reward, he didn't feel the need to take the £150,000 publicly funded salary any more.

    For anyone who gives a crap, his tweeter profile states:

    "Centre Left. Was Chief Inspector of Probation/CEO Nacro/Governor Brixton prison. Luton Town devotee,Glasto regular.Enjoying life on the farm in Devon."

    Sodexo's site describes Janine McDowell as:

    "Responsible for overseeing the running of five prisons and six community rehabilitation companies, as well as the contract for Exeter Courts."

    Exeter is the county town of Devon.

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  3. Good news/bad news

    "Boris Johnson’s planned visit to India next week has been cancelled because of the country’s escalating coronavirus crisis / " prime ministers [Narendra] Modi and Johnson will speak later this month to agree and launch their ambitious plans for the future partnership"


    Modi's policy of making 2m people effectively stateless in Assam is not so very different to the Myanmar regime crackdown on Rohingya peoples, or the Chinese programmes against the Uighurs, or the Israeli annexation & control of Palestinian territories. Might there be a theme? Hint: the persecuted groups are Muslim.

    "The Tories aren't ashamed of their Islamophobia. They're proud of it - Nesrine Malik, Guardian, 2020:

    Almost 60% of Conservative members believe poisonous myths about “no-go areas in Britain where sharia law dominates and non-Muslims cannot enter”. Another 57% expressed negative views about Muslims, of which 21% registered very negative attitudes."

    https://www.hopenothate.org.uk/2020/09/30/the-cultural-problem-of-islamophobia-in-the-conservative-party/


    We can only hope that the USA seems to have moved on:

    "After taking office, Trump appointed many Islamophobes to his team and inspired many others to come out and show their bigotry openly. One of them did so here in South Florida, declaring herself a “proud Islamophobe” and, sadly, was nominated by local Republicans to represent a South Florida district in Congress. She lost, but, tellingly, more than 150,000 people voted for this “proud Islamophobe”.

    Taking inspiration from Trump’s hateful rhetoric, a terrorist in Christchurch, New Zealand, killed 51 people at two mosques last year. The killer cited Trump as a “symbol of renewed white identity.”

    Read more here: https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article247577170.html#storylink=cpy

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  4. Business 'as usual' here in the UK

    "The boss of a private hospital company has been awarded an annual bonus worth more than £300,000 after the business he leads benefited from an emergency NHS takeover worth £360m during the pandemic.

    Spire Healthcare Group’s chief executive, Justin Ash, received a £1.2m pay package in 2020, up from £1m in 2019, and share options that have already soared in value, according to the company’s annual report, published this month.

    The package included a base salary of £618,000 plus bonuses and other benefits worth almost £600,000."

    Its all perfectly normal.


    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/apr/19/spire-healthcare-boss-awarded-bonus-worth-over-300000-after-nhs-takeover

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    1. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-56667960

      "The role of a former Tory parliamentary candidate and party donor in a £100m government deal to buy PPE has been revealed after an apparent admin error.

      The deal for face masks was signed in July, but the names of those involved were blacked out when the contract was finally published seven months later.

      A second document listed Samir Jassal, an ex-councillor who has campaigned with the PM, as the supplier's contact.

      The government has said ministers have no part in deciding who gets contracts."

      Are there any similarities with other didgy PPE contracts? Well...

      "Mr Jassal, a former Conservative Party councillor, appears well connected to the government... he stood as a Conservative candidate in two general elections... he claims he worked as an adviser to the now Home Secretary Priti Patel between 2014 and 2015... In 2016, he donated £4,000 to the party... Despite costing more than £100m, at least two hospital trusts have reported issues with the fit of the model of masks supplied under the contract."

      So - chums who have donated to the party, vast sums of public money involved, large amounts of kit deemed not fit for purpose by medical professionals.

      Its all perfectly normal.

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    2. Business as usual - its all perfectly normal

      - but only IF you're a member of 'The Club'.


      "Boris Johnson assured Sir James Dyson his employees would not have to pay extra tax if they came to the UK to make ventilators during the pandemic.

      Sir James, whose firm is now based in Singapore, wrote to the Treasury to ask for no change in tax status for staff.

      But in text messages sent in March 2020 - seen by the BBC - Sir James then went directly to the PM, with Mr Johnson replying: "I will fix it." "

      https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-56819137

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  5. There's no time for parliamentary debate or consideration of abuse against women, children, stalking, climate change, world poverty/famine, the plundering of £billions of public funds, bigotry & racism, islamophobia, etc etc etc, BUT...

    "Boris Johnson has promised football groups that the government will consider using what he called “a legislative bomb” to stop English clubs joining a breakaway European Super League, as official efforts to thwart the plan were stepped up.

    The prime minister and Oliver Dowden, the sports and culture secretary, held a meeting with the heads of the Football Association and Premier League, as well as representatives of fans’ groups from Liverpool, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur, three of the clubs involved.

    At one point, according to sources, Johnson told the event: “We should drop a legislative bomb to stop it – and we should do it now.”"


    What a shallow country we have become.

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  6. Minneapolis Miracle!

    20 April 2021.

    This is a BIG moment for the world.

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  7. This is our PM at a press conference today (before the Chauvin verdict):

    Q: Paul Waugh from HuffPost opened with a relatively straightforward question about the government’s climate change targets but then...

    “Do you agree with the Independent Office for Police Conduct which, in its review of your links with Jennifer Arcuri concluded, and I quote: ‘It would have been wise for Mr Johnson to include this as a conflict of interest and a failure to do so could have constituted a breach of the Nolan principles and those principle include acting with honesty and integrity.’ Do you believe you acted with honesty and integrity in your relationship with Jennifer Arcuri, who claims you conducted your affair in the marital home?”

    A: Boris responded with several minutes of waffle about the UK meeting its green targets, desperately hoping that time would stop... But no relief was forthcoming and there was only so long he could go on about green air travel. So, to his own surprise as much as everyone else’s, he answered the Arcuri question. Not that he could bring himself to mention Arcuri by name, but he did for the first time in public admit that they had had an affair. “In response to your second question,” Johnson said awkwardly, “the answer is yes”."

    This was the prime minister’s moral code. There was nothing wrong with conducting an affair wherever you liked. And there was also nothing wrong with inviting your lover on trade missions to boost her career. For some politicians, such an admission could have been career ending.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/apr/20/johnson-blindsided-as-hes-quizzed-about-arcuri-affair

    Forget the pathetic, cowardly football distraction.

    20.04.21 is significant for the Chauvin conviction.

    But its also the day that a UK Prime Minister stated publicly believes he acted "with honesty and integrity" whilst conducting an extra-marital affair on the family sofa, and personally ensuring that the target of his 'affections' was enabled to benefit from access to significant amounts of public funding.

    Doesn't that just make the stomach churn?

    In the aftermath of such grotesque personal indulgence the Dirty Shagger has been levitated to the position of PM ... and has overtly & shamelessly ensured his chums have been enriched beyond most peoples' wildest expectations of wealth.

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  8. Boris's secure borders

    "Hundreds of people a week are trying to enter the UK with fake coronavirus test certificates, MPs have been told.

    Lucy Moreton, professional officer at the Immigration Services Union (ISU), which represents border, immigration and customs staff in the UK, said the certificates are “very easy to knock up electronically”.

    She also said it is “inherently unknowable” how many people with fake certificates are not being caught by the authorities.

    About 20,000 people are currently entering the UK every day, the majority of which are hauliers.

    On Tuesday, Moreton was asked at a meeting of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus how officials are able to verify certificates given they are looking at “documentation from all over the world”.

    She answered: “We’re not, is the simple answer. It’s predominately taken on trust. We do get 100 or more a day of fake Covid certificates that we can catch.... if it’s in English and there’s a spelling error, you’ve got an outside chance of spotting it.” "


    In other news: HMRC officials have named Dom Cummings' poverty stricken father-in-law Sir Humphry Wakefield as claiming substantial amounts of furlough cash for his staff.

    In the official documents they mis-spelled Sir Humphry's name (they added an 'e').

    Might that be an issue for Ms Moreton's fearless frontline troops?

    Hands up those who think Sir Humphr(e)y would be at risk of being accused of having false covid papers?

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  9. Regardless of one's views on Mr Mercer's politics, this insider's commentary on this government is worth a quick read:

    James Morris
    21 April 2021, 6:26 pm

    Sacked minister Johnny Mercer has said Boris Johnson’s government is the “most distrustful, awful environment I’ve ever worked in”.

    In an extraordinary attack on Johnson’s administration 24 hours after he left it, Mercer claimed “almost nobody” in the government tells the truth.

    His diatribe, in an interview on Times Radio, didn’t end there.

    It also extended to the “cesspit” of Westminster, which he said is populated by “children” who are “frankly unemployable elsewhere”.

    Mercer wrote a letter of resignation from his role as veterans minister on Tuesday, having expressed frustration at a lack of progress on legislation to protect British veterans who served during the Troubles from prosecution.

    Downing Street said it accepted the resignation, but Mercer claimed he was instead “relieved of my responsibilities in government”.

    While not attacking Johnson personally on Wednesday – Mercer said he is a “friend” – he rounded on his former ministerial colleagues.

    “He should expect his ministers, I think, to be as committed to the manifesto as he is. And if I’m made to feel like I’m the last man in the room who’s willing to fulfil our manifesto commitments, there’s something wrong. We reached that point, so I left.”

    He went on: “This is the most distrustful, awful environment I’ve ever worked in, in government. Almost nobody tells the truth, is what I’ve worked out over the last 36 hours.

    “I don’t think anyone really can get on their high horse about trust and ethics and all the rest of it in politics, because as far as I’m concerned, most of it is a bit of a cesspit.”

    Referring to the lack of progress in his quest to protect veterans who served in Northern Ireland, Mercer, a former Army officer, also appeared to attack fellow MPs.

    "I'm accountable to the public and I'm accountable to these veterans, as their veterans minister. So whatever anyone in Westminster thinks about it, I couldn't really care less. I'm accountable to these people as their minister and that would have been the right way to do it.

    "As it happens, how Westminster works, there's a lot of children running around Westminster frankly unemployable elsewhere who think it's all a game: 'We want to spike his little plan.'

    “It is really pathetic and I'm just sorry to see people who I did respect 24/36 hours ago play their role in that and think it's all about me. It's never about me and I think at some point people will grow up and realise this."

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    1. Mercer is an inexperienced ex public schoolboy who is sulking. He comes from captaincy rank and soldiers comradary . He does not understand much of any nuance and tries to appear clever and superior. I don't think he understood his role so junior and blames out on a task that has already been decided. To protect serving vets from prosecution of events abroad is not good anyway but you cannot change the process for what happened in NI. Prosecutions already taken place would have to repealed and they won't do that. The historic shooting by the army should never have happened. No matter what orders .no soldier should think it ok to attack with live ammo a civilian crowd. Soldiers could rightly have aimed at identifiably armed but the fact is they did not. Just obeying orders is no defence no matter what. Mercer playboy the Tories will get him at some point but I doubt he has the intelligence for the politics just what the Johnson government like.

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  10. Oh my, how those tory tongues twist the truth to suit their own narrative:

    "Ministers should not be "locked away in ivory towers" with people unable to contact them, a top Tory MP has said.

    Sir Bernard Jenkin said they should be able to carry out conversations about policy in private.

    His intervention comes after the leaking of texts between Boris Johnson and Sir James Dyson about tax rules." - BBC news pages.


    The distractionistas & revisionistas are everywhere, playing parlour games while the country stumbles along.

    And even now the country still seems to think that this government is "doing everything in its power".

    I can't fathom as to why the UK remains blind to the rampant fraud, the blatant lies & the overt plundering of public funds for personal gain by a handful of greedy shits & their slavering chums.

    The lack of a meaningful HM Opposition probably helps explain the situation we find ourselves in; Starmer, the Oxbridge flautist, is definitely not the pied piper.


    Meanwhile, the ever dull HMPPS webpage brings us this delicacy:

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/979382/psprb-evidence-2021-2022.pdf

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  11. 23 April 2021, a day of real celebration for real people here in the UK:

    Thirty-nine postmasters who were victims of the UK's most widespread miscarriage of justice have had their names formally cleared.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-56859105

    Yet another case of protracted spineless bullying, corporate corruption, lies & disturbingly abusive behaviour directed at 'the little people' has been both outed & corrected by a court.

    And what about those that perpetrated the abuse?

    "Nobody from the Post Office has ever come and apologised to me" - Alison Hall

    "Post Office Chairman Tim Parker has said the company is "extremely sorry" to those affected and their families, blaming "historical failures"."

    "historical failures"; "IT glitches"; "it is what it is, we are where we are"; etc etc etc ad nauseaum...

    Its all perfectly normal, i.e. the powerful & the wealthy are unscathed; the 'little people' get crushed, battered & ripped apart.

    My heartfelt congratulations go out to those who were cleared today. Lets hope there's finally a thorough inquiry and convictions for those "historical failures" who thought it was okay to shit on people.

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    1. We are a nation of blame recrimination criminalise . We ruin children's lives with criminal records. More recently softer approaches. We have dishonest police abusers killers now and selections of people who aren't right. We have super wealth but massive homeless . Money in abundance but massive poor and food banks . Cameron steals as much as possible and only has things to learn . Did he not get an education at Eton for crooks. Johnson had no skills but says he welcomes the outcome . Oh yea wtf does he make a comment on that for? He has no idea of justice look at his home secretary protected by his behaviour. As for mercer I think when be bunked off parliament to go TV celeb status hunting Boris thought hed mix the young pretender a potion then. Now he has really gotton rid of the wannabes pm Upstart. It's all crooked.

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  12. The usual suspects hiding behind anonymity
    That it all.

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  13. "prisons remain at high risk of outbreaks and may act as “a potential reservoir and amplifier of infection for the community”."

    * Sage warns jails could unleash Covid variants into wider community - Government advisers say universal vaccination of inmates and prison staff is best way to mitigate risk

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/apr/23/sage-warns-jails-unleash-covid-variants-wider-community

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