Tuesday 1 June 2021

A Service In Its Own Right

In the wake of the Usman Khan inquest verdict, silence from HMPPS high command and probation about to be totally subsumed by bureaucracy, here's former BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw making the case for something novel:-
"But treating offender management as a service in its own right, a service delivered by a probation system which is invested in, nurtured and valued, will undoubtedly reduce the risks and help save lives."
Risking it all

It all felt sadly, appallingly familiar.

When the inquest jury concluded that failings by the police, probation and MI5 had contributed to the deaths of Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt at Fishmongers’ Hall in London it reminded me of three other cases where those entrusted with protecting the public simply hadn’t done what they should have done. The failings in each case were similar to those which led to the killings of the two University of Cambridge graduates in November 2019 - but none involved a convicted terrorist. It serves as a reminder that we should not see what Usman Khan did at Fishmongers’ Hall as an isolated event, unique to terrorism.

In 2016, there was the case of Leroy Campbell, a violent sex offender who raped and murdered 37-year-old Lisa Skidmore, attempted to kill her elderly mother and set fire to Lisa’s flat in Wolverhampton. At the time, Campbell was under probation supervision, having been released from prison four months earlier. An official review said the “most striking” of a string of failings was a decision by probation staff “not to respond actively enough to a clear indication that risk may be increasing notably”.

The following year, 28-year-old Quyen Nguyen was found burned to death in her car, near Sunderland. She’d been held captive, tortured and raped. The two men responsible for her murder, Stephen Unwin and William McFall, were both convicted killers who’d been on life licence after being let out of prison. At the inquest into Quyen’s death, the Coroner pointed to a series of mistakes in the way Unwin and McFall had been monitored saying they’d been “emboldened in all of their unlawful activities by what they must have perceived as the failures on the part of the authorities to expose their deceit”.

And in 2019, the year of the Fishmongers’ Hall attacks, a convicted burglar, Joseph McCann, carried out a terrifying campaign of sexual violence against eleven women and children two months after he’d been released from prison. An independent report set out a number of shocking failings including the loss of crucial information as probation officers struggled to deal with their caseloads. Staff missed eight opportunities to activate the recall process and send McCann back to jail, before he launched the attacks.

The circumstances of each of these cases are different, of course, but the themes, when examined in detail, are the same: a readiness to accept the word of manipulative, dangerous offenders allied to a lack of curiosity about what they were up to; a failure by agencies and staff to share vital information; and poor case management linked to pressures of workload and inexperience. The themes will doubtless ring a bell or two for those who’ve followed the Fishmongers’ Hall inquest.

However, the focus of the Government’s response to that avoidable tragedy has been to frame it almost completely in the context of terrorism. So there’ll be tougher sentences in terror cases, with more terrorism prisoners assessed for release by the Parole Board; polygraph tests for terrorism offenders on licence will be introduced; and more probation staff and psychologists will be trained in counter-terrorism. These are welcome developments but they don’t get to the heart of the problem: the system for rehabilitating all offenders, for managing them in the community, for protecting the public has been severely stretched to the point where, in some areas of England and Wales, it is all but broken.

Although a number of agencies play a part in monitoring offenders, the responsibility primarily falls on the probation system whose deficiencies have been highlighted in a succession of worrying reports. In his annual review, in December 2020, Justin Russell, the chief inspector of probation, set out his concerns. “For more than 15 years, probation funding has been on a downward trend,” he said. “Government spending per person under supervision is down 40% in real terms since 2003/2004.” Russell said the area which suffered from the “weakest performance” and which “most concerned” him was work managing the risk of harm, in other words, protecting people. “Time and again, we are finding that some of the fundamental tasks of effective risk management have been missed,” he wrote.

So what is the remedy? Ministers are pinning their hopes on a new model of offender supervision to be implemented on June 26. It is a massive and complex change that involves staff from 54 separate organisations, including 7,500 in the private and voluntary sectors, coming together under the auspices of the state-run National Probation Service. That the preparations for the overhaul are taking place during a pandemic has made it all the more challenging. Indeed, in his latest report, Russell revealed that it could take “at least four years” for the new structure to be fully in place. “There will be inherent risks,” the chief inspector warned, citing “acute” staff shortages in some places, potential “gaps” in rehabilitation support and concerns that progress in helping prisoners resettle in communities will be set back.

The consensus is that the new, unified probation system will be more effective than the existing two-tier set up, under which low and medium risk offenders are dealt with by privately-owned community rehabilitation companies and those posing the highest threat supervised by the state. However, as Russell has noted, the reforms are not a “magic bullet” and must be backed by extra resources, particularly so that vacancies can be filled and staff receive the training they need.

For probation officers, change is nothing new. The Government promised a “rehabilitation revolution” in 2010, repeating the pledge in 2012 when its ill-conceived plans to partially privatise the system were announced. The “revolution” never materialised and in many respects rehabilitation provision and offender management have deteriorated over the past decade, increasing the risks to the public.

We will never know whether a properly funded and less battered probation service would have stopped Campbell, Unwin, McFall, McCann or even Khan. And we shouldn’t pretend that the risks posed by offenders can be eliminated through better information sharing, more sophisticated training and rigorous case management. But treating offender management as a service in its own right, a service delivered by a probation system which is invested in, nurtured and valued, will undoubtedly reduce the risks and help save lives.

Danny Shaw

7 comments:

  1. Tuesday June 01 2021, 12.01am, The Times

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/terror-threat-means-home-office-should-oversee-prisons-zh3zzjrvd

    The inquest into the Fishmongers’ Hall attack, as well as finding that the killings of Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones were unlawful, has revealed that this was a wholly preventable tragedy. The attacker, Usman Khan, wasn’t so much cleverly exploiting loopholes of the system as taking advantage of one that was wide open. A deadly mix of catastrophic naivety and a woeful lack of co-ordination between the police, MI5, prisons and probation services contributed to the awful events of November 2019.

    Here was one of the most dangerous offenders in the entire prison system. Yet after release he was put under the supervision of police and probation officers who lacked the training and experience to deal with someone who was deeply ideologically motivated and deceitful.

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  2. "But treating offender management as a service in its own right, a service delivered by a probation system which is invested in, nurtured and valued, will undoubtedly reduce the risks and help save lives."

    Danny will no doubt be aware that no-one listened to that argument in 2000; or in 2007; or in 2010; or in 2012/13/14/15...

    But at least he's trying to get the word out.

    Two glaring issues raised by Danny's piece:

    1. "From 31 March 2014 Probation Trusts will cease to operate and be replaced by a National Probation Service dealing solely with the highest risk offenders" (Probation Journal, 2013); but Grayling's favoured child, the 'new' NPS, seems to be the service that has failed most spectacularly.

    2. Resources.

    "the system for rehabilitating all offenders, for managing them in the community, for protecting the public has been severely stretched to the point where, in some areas of England and Wales, it is all but broken... “There will be inherent risks,” the chief inspector warned, citing “acute” staff shortages in some places... the reforms are not a “magic bullet” and must be backed by extra resources, particularly so that vacancies can be filled and staff receive the training they need."


    Lol Burke, Probation Journal, 2013: "...the skills of appropriately trained practitioners in supervising offenders and delivering interventions can contribute to reducing reoffending and improving other outcomes. This is supported by international evidence (Raynor et al., 2013) that more skilled probation staff produce better results from the supervision process."


    The Govt response in 2013/4? Sign contracts with private companies which had substantial job losses built in - primarily targetting the 'expensive' longer serving, more experienced staff - to improve CRC profitability.

    The Govt response in 2020/21? Once again use public money to cut jobs by budgeting for an Enhanced Voluntary Redundancy scheme, i.e. lose the experienced & knowledgeable whilst replacing them with newly indoctrinated on-message recruits.

    But look where reinventing the NPS got them... understaffed, under-resourced, over-stretched, tied up in redtape, burdened by bureaucracy, with shit or non-existent IT & aspiring bullies in managerial posts.


    Why would anyone listen now?

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  3. From the Telegraph.

    Ministers are to consider indefinite jail terms for extremists convicted of planning terror attacks in the wake of the Fishmongers’ Hall attack.

    They are due to meet with key adviser Jonathan Hall who says the only effective deterrent to potentially highly-dangerous jihadists is to give them indefinite prison terms to protect the public.
    Mr Hall, the independent adviser on terrorist legislation, said this would mean that they would have no hope of release by a parole board unless they could demonstrate that they had turned their backs on their extremist beliefs.

    He said that even under the current reforms there were still fixed-term sentences for those convicted of planning terror attacks which meant they could sit out their time knowing they would eventually be released.

    “How do you get those people to accept or change if they know they are going to be released eventually,” Mr Hall told The Telegraph.

    Justice ministers are expected to meet Mr Hall to discuss his proposals. “I think we've shown we're not afraid to change laws in this area,” said a source.

    It follows Friday’s inquest verdict which blamed MI5 and the police for a series of failings that left Fishmongers' Hall terrorist Usman Khan free to kill University of Cambridge graduates Jack Merritt, 25, and Saskia Jones, 23, near London Bridge in 2019.

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  4. Cont...

    Khan was serving a 16-year determinate sentence for his part in an al-Qaeda-inspired plot to bomb high-profile locations and build a terrorist training camp in Pakistan. The sentence meant the prison authorities had no option but to release Khan halfway through his sentence.

    The Government has responded by ending automatic release halfway through a sentence and introducing a 14-year minimum jail term and up to 25 years spent on licence for the most serious offences.

    However, Mr Hall said courts had the option to impose a minimum 25-year determinate sentence for those who did not receive life sentences. “The trouble is there is no role for the parole board in those determinate sentences,” said Mr Hall.

    “My feeling is that for someone like Khan who posed an enduring risk, it is better to have an indefinite sentence. It is better to have that person on a long leash and only released when the risk is diminished.”

    Khan was originally placed on an indeterminate public protection sentence, which ends only when the parole board considers that an offender no longer poses a risk to the public.

    But this was quashed by the Court of Appeal in 2013 at a time when some politicians and penal reform campaigners feared such sentences were resulting in prisoners unjustly spending too long in jail, and they were being abolished.

    A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "Judges already have the power to hand down a life sentence for this offence and our new laws mean terrorists now spend longer behind bars and are monitored more closely than ever before.”

    'Getafix

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  5. I am so exhausted by the whole thing someone, anyone get rid of me....none of this is healthy, both physically and mentally I am done now!

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  6. Does anyone have any news or updates on the EVR that has been previously mentioned?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Two options:
      Speak with your union where applicable, or;
      Speak with your employer

      There was a link to the Unison site on this blog some days ago

      Don't let the bullshit, burnout & bullying rob you of your capacity to look after yourselves.

      Delete