Monday 23 December 2019

There Could Be Trouble Ahead

As always, the Daily Mail proves to be the perfect place to run a flag up the pole and make sure enough people are keen to salute it. Here's Rob Allen's take on word of Priti Patel's plans for a return to the Home Office:-  

Back Home? Why Sentencing, Prison and Probation Should Stay in the Ministry of Justice

The Johnson government is reportedly considering a shift in responsibility for sentencing, prisons and probation from the Ministry of Justice to the Home Office. I’m not altogether surprised; before the 2016 referendum, I heard Michael Gove tell an Oxford seminar he’d like to disband the MoJ (of which he was then Secretary of State), because it was a European type of institution unsuited to British traditions.

There may be a superficial attraction in combining responsibilities for crime and punishment - not only to those who favour a more punitive approach to offending but by those who hope that any Home Office plans for a crackdown would be tempered by the need for the Department to pay for its penal consequences.

But while the MoJ’s governance of criminal justice over the last 12 years may have earned it few friends, progressive reform is much less likely to emerge from our Interior Ministry – famously described by Whitehall-watcher Peter Hennessey as the graveyard of liberal thinking since the days of Lord Sidmouth.

For one thing, according to a book she co-authored in 2011, Priti Patel the current Home Secretary believes that we need to “reverse the tide of soft justice”, ensure that persistent offenders are imprisoned for long periods of time and make prisons “tough, unpleasant and uncomfortable places”. After the Coalition- a Conservative Agenda for Britain written with four other current government ministers argues that “the primary purpose of our justice system is to protect our society, not to act as a welfare service for convicted criminals”. Current proposals to increase the severity of sentences may not go far enough to satisfy their desire for harder penalties.

Not all Home Secretaries are so firmly in the Michael Howard Prison Works tradition of course, but responsibility for security and the reduction of crime will often produce penal policy which is at best risk averse and at worst unnecessarily harsh. The Ministry of Justice, whose centre of gravity includes human rights and the rule of law ought to tend to a more balanced approach to the use and practice of imprisonment. Home Secretary Theresa May's joke to Justice Secretary Kenneth Clarke., “I lock ‘em up, you let em out” says something about the departments as well as their ministers.

Consolidating crime and punishment in the Home Office would raise questions about the Parole Board - increasingly a judicial body that would not sit well in Marsham Street; about Youth Justice which many think belongs in the Education department; and about the role of Police and Crime Commissioners.

Ms Patel and her colleagues argue that the role of PCCs should be extended so they are responsible for commissioning custodial and non-custodial sentences for those who are convicted. There could be some benefits to such a devolved approach if it creates a dynamic to encourage the development of better alternatives to prison and measures to reduce re-offending. But the government’s belief that public confidence in criminal justice will be restored by longer prison terms make these Justice Reinvestment outcomes unlikely in the current climate.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the new democracies of Eastern Europe who wanted to join the Council of Europe had to meet certain conditions including abolishing the death penalty and moving their prison systems to the Ministry of Justice. The latter was to encourage the "civilianisation" of highly militaristic and security focused approaches to detention. The MoJ is now responsible for prisons in all 47 countries of the Council of Europe, except Spain.

In their book, Ms Patel and her colleagues have deplored the fact that an increasing human rights agenda and increasing interference from Europe discourage prison sentences, decrying the Council of Europe’s belief that prisoners should be treated in a way that reflects the normal life of freedom that all citizens generally enjoy.

Moving prisons to the Home Office could mean much more than an administrative change. It could be a fast and slippery slope to people going to prison not as a punishment but for a punishment.


Rob Allen

13 comments:

  1. As a PO, I support anything that tips the balance of favour in our direction as opposed to the criminal. I also fully support getting rid of the disastrous parole board.

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    1. It's a troll - best to just ignore.

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    2. "oh no it isn't!" - etc etc etc

      !! Fol-di-rol !!

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  2. Interesting - Priti Patel used the Daily Mail for articles in late 2012 - when she was a mere Chris Grayling sycophant with exaggerated personal ambitions as she helped him set the ground for what became Transforming Rehabilitation.

    https://fullfact.org/crime/has-probation-service-failed-public/

    She asked a serious of questions designed to get responses that highlighted the amount of post conviction reoffending and then wrote about it in The daily Mail.

    Prior to becoming an MP she was a press agent (as I think such positions were officially named back in about the 1930s) She came in to Politics via the bloke who set up the Referendum Party - was that Zac (or should I say Lord) Goldsmith's father.

    Unfortunately she continues to be my member of Parliament and continues to block me on Twitter.

    My last face to face contact was when she shooed me away with an outstretched hand in the central lobby of the Palace of Westminster after telling me that on that day, she had spoken to the Essex Chief Probation Officer, Chief Police Officer and some high up in the County Council who all assured her that TR would be safely delivered in Essex.

    At that I suggested it would be a bit easier in Essex, because only one Probation Trust involved in forming a new Community Rehabilitation Company - at which she smiled and indicated that Essex was her main concern.

    I will not be surprised if she oversteps herself again and even her relationship with Boris Johnson will be unable to keep her in a ministerial position. Already, she has surpassed Chris Grayling in ultimate superiority - sadly she handles the Essex Media excellently and constantly attracts plaudits from constituents so will probably be an MP for a good while yet.

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    1. At least two mistakes above - wrong Goldsmith AND Ms Patel did start with Conservatives until she moved to work for Sir James Goldsmith according to The Daily Express.

      https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/life/642291/Priti-Patel-could-Brexit-poster-girl-EU-exit-campaign-out-referendum-conservative-Ukip

      Her neighbouring constituency MP is John Whittingale OBE former private secretary to Mrs Thatcher and later worked for William Hague when he was party leader. She has also overtaken Mr Whittingale in seniority and will be ambitious to become leader. As Conservatives have chosen Mr Johnson, I guess that eventually that is a real possibility unless she comes a cropper with him and their careers explode together.

      Just maybe, they have such influence with the press that they will both be able to survive most political disasters.

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    2. Some reading for the Xmas holidays:

      https://www.desmog.co.uk/priti-patel

      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/jul/26/priti-patel-accused-of-breaching-ministerial-code-for-second-time

      https://www.conservativehome.com/platform/2019/10/priti-patel-if-the-left-think-im-hardline-on-law-and-order-they-should-try-meeting-the-british-public.html

      https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/political-parties/conservative-party/news/107646/home-secretary-priti-patels-chief-staff

      http://gal-dem.com/everything-horrible-priti-patel-has-smirked-at-said-and-done/

      https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/mbmzjx/priti-patel-poverty-government

      https://www.crimeandjustice.org.uk/resources/criminal-justice-harsher-and-more-punitive-ever

      https://www.indy100.com/video/politics/resurfaced-video-shows-ian-hislop-shutting-down-priti-patels-argument-in-favour-of-capital-punishment-0QDc9ySH

      https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/5-reasons-why-priti-patel-is-the-last-person-we-should-be-listening-to-on-britains-aid-budget/

      https://blog.bham.ac.uk/socialsciencesbirmingham/2019/08/14/tough-on-crime-or-just-a-smokescreen/

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  3. Trouble's already here and, as ever, the lies from government staff continue to rain down upon us:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-50885242

    "Lots of former Thomas Cook colleagues are in worse situations, telling us they have received nothing and have been poorly advised by their job centres. It stems from confusion over whether they are entitled to job seeker's allowance or universal credit... Mistakes mean claims being cancelled and long waits to recoup missed payments... [Ian] was initially told to claim for universal credit which would have a five week processing time. During that five week period, he travelled to Manchester from his parents' house in Scotland for a weekly appointment at the job centre. However, a day before the first payment was due, his claim was cancelled... He was then advised he should have applied for job seeker's allowance. "

    But Hark! :

    The Department for Work and Pensions has apologised. "We are sorry if people have experienced delayed payments and urge them to stay in contact with their job centre so we can urgently fix their claims.

    "We know that losing a job is a distressing time for people. When Thomas Cook collapsed we were ready on day one to help the 11,000 people who lost their jobs.

    "Our dedicated staff have helped thousands of those affected, including through home visits to those unable to reach the job centre and by fast-tracking applications so people are supported to find new work or training as soon as possible."

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  4. A woman has admitted trying to open an aeroplane door mid-flight prompting two fighter jets to be scrambled. Chloe Haines, 26, of High Wycombe, also scratched a crew member who tried to stop her opening the door on the Jet2 flight to Dalaman, Turkey, on 22 June. Two RAF fighter jets rushed to escort the plane back to Stansted Airport, causing a sonic boom across Essex.

    Haines, who admitted two charges, is due to be sentenced at Chelmsford Crown Court on 24 January. She pleaded guilty on Monday to endangering the safety of a passenger plane and assault by beating.

    Haines' barrister Oliver Saxby told Chelmsford Crown Court there was "no question" Haines was drunk at the time. Mr Saxby told the court: "On any analysis, she's a troubled young person with a number of serious issues. "Seventeen days before this incident, she had been sentenced to a community order for not dissimilar offences, not committed in the air but with alcohol and a loss of control. "That order had not had a chance to bite."

    He said Haines, of Station Road in Loudwater, had "to her credit engaged more fully with Alcoholics Anonymous". Judge Charles Gratwicke warned Haines that "all sentencing options remain open". Her bail conditions include that she does not travel from any UK airport.

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    1. Presumably having been granted permission to leave the UK by whoever was supervising her order.

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    2. I wasn't aware they needed permission whilst on a CO.

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    3. "That order had not had a chance to bite."

      Sometimes a bite can get you in big trouble.

      https://www-mirror-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/man-jailed-six-months-after-21100767.amp?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15771246232796&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.mirror.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fus-news%2Fman-jailed-six-months-after-21100767

      'Getafix

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    4. A man is serving six months in prison after he was caught eating a leftover cookie while serving meals in a rehabilitation centre.

      Gregory Fields, 42, from San Francisco, was serving lunch to the homeless at The Salvation Army Harbor Light Centre as part of a residential treatment programme after a vandalism charge in 2017.

      He allegedly ate a cookie without permission and was asked to leave the rehab programme, NBC News reports.

      The incident has alerted his case worker who told Fields that he could return to the programme if he started it again from the beginning - meaning a 30-day blackout period where they cannot contact family or friends.

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    5. Unlock say:

      "There is no general exclusion from travelling abroad whilst serving a community order.

      However, travel abroad may, in practice, not be feasible due to the requirements of the community order, e.g. a curfew, regular unpaid work or supervision. If you require a variation to these requirements in order to travel abroad (for example, rearranging a meeting) then you will need to seek permission from Probation.

      There may also be a specific prohibition as part of the community order that stops you from travelling abroad. If you are in doubt, you should contact your offender manager."


      Nacro offer this for licences:

      "If you wish to travel outside the UK while you are on licence, you will need to seek permission from your probation officer. Each request is considered on a case-by-case basis, but you should be aware that permission will only be granted in exceptional circumstances."


      The old London Probation Service used to operate the following policy:

      "To ensure that offenders subject to probation supervision while on a community order or licence are effectively managed throughout their order, temporary travel outside of the United Kingdom should not be granted other than in very limited and exceptional circumstances."

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