Tuesday 24 January 2023

HMPPS Not Fit For Purpose

Here we are again with yet another SFO, exactly as predicted as a direct result of imposing part-privatisation of the Probation Service with TR. Reunification under HMPPS command and control is not the answer because that department is simply not fit for purpose. How long is it going to take before either the present government understands this, or more significantly, the Labour Party understands the Probation Service must be reconfigured as a distinct and separate agency. Todays HMI press release:-

Independent Serious Further Offence review of Jordan McSweeney

Background:

On 14 December 2022, Jordan McSweeney was sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum term of 38 years, having pleaded guilty to the murder and sexual assault of Ms Zara Aleena. These offences occurred as Ms Aleena walked home, alone, with McSweeney following her, before he subjected her to a sustained physical and sexual assault. Jordan McSweeney was subject to probation supervision when these offences occurred.

In July 2022, the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice asked HM Chief Inspector of Probation Justin Russell to conduct an independent review into this case, as Jordan McSweeney was on probation when he is alleged to have committed these offences. The review was completed in January 2023.

Statement:

Chief Inspector of Probation Justin Russell said: “Jordan McSweeney should have been considered a high risk of serious harm offender. If he had, more urgent action would have been taken to recall him to prison, after he missed his supervision appointments on release from custody. The Probation Service failed to do so, and he was free to commit this most heinous crime on an innocent, young women. Our independent review brings into sharp focus the consequences of these missed opportunities and reveals a Probation Service, in London, under the mounting pressure of heavy workloads and high vacancy rates.

“McSweeney murdered Zara just days after being released from prison. During his sentence, he was considered a violent and threatening man – to other prisoners and to prison staff – and had carried weapons. Known to the criminal justice system, since 2005, McSweeney had been imprisoned many times before, and had displayed violent and racially aggravated behaviour. He also received a restraining order for an offence, against a woman, in 2021.

“All the evidence shows that McSweeney should have been assessed, on release from prison, as high risk of serious harm. Instead, he was incorrectly assessed as being of medium risk because each of the offences, his behaviours in prison, and his criminal history, had been reviewed in isolation. Probation staff involved were also experiencing unmanageable workloads made worse by high staff vacancy rates – something we have increasingly seen in our local inspections of services. Prison and probation services didn’t communicate effectively about McSweeney’s risks, leaving the Probation Service with an incomplete picture of someone who was likely to reoffend.

“Following his release from prison and successive appointments being missed, the Probation Service failed to take prompt action to recall him to custody. Once that decision had been made, there were also delays in signing the necessary paperwork to initiate the recall. Had this been done sooner, opportunities for the police to locate and arrest McSweeney would have been maximised.”

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Highlights from the full report:-

1. Foreword 

On 14 December 2022, Jordan McSweeney was sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum term of 38 years, having pleaded guilty to the murder and sexual assault of Ms Zara Aleena. These offences occurred as Ms Aleena walked home, alone, with Mr McSweeney following her, before he subjected her to a sustained physical and sexual assault. This crime has devastated her family and shocked the local community and beyond. 

Jordan McSweeney was subject to probation supervision when these offences occurred. The Probation Service typically conducts a Serious Further Offence (SFO) review when an individual on probation commits a serious violent or sexual offence. However, in this case, the Secretary of State for Justice asked me, as Chief Inspector of Probation, to conduct an independent SFO review into the Probation Service’s management of Jordan McSweeney.

This report sets out the findings of that independent review. My inspectors found that the assessment of the level of risk posed by Jordan McSweeney was inaccurate given information that was known regarding past offending, behaviour in custody and patterns of behaviour. Subsequently this impacted on the way his case was managed and the level of oversight he was subject to. 

Had the correct assessment of risk of harm been undertaken to identify that Jordan McSweeney posed a high risk of serious harm, actions taken in terms of pre-release planning, plans for accommodation on release and speed of response to non-attendance after release could have been significantly different and potentially more urgent. 

Following his most recent sentence, in April 2022, there were significant delays in McSweeney’s case being correctly allocated to a probation officer in the community. This impacted on the time available to update his risk assessment and plan effectively for his release on 17 June 2022. 

Following his release, and successive probation appointments being missed, the Probation Service failed to take prompt action in respect of recalling him to custody. Once that decision was made there were also delays in signing the paperwork to initiate the recall. Had this been undertaken sooner, opportunities for the police to locate and arrest Jordan McSweeney would have been maximised. 

The practice deficits in this case are set against a backdrop of excessive workloads and challenges in respect of staffing vacancies in the London region. I have commented on this in recent local probation inspections and the recommendations made in this report correspond to many of our findings in these. This is far from the first time we have made recommendations relating to the need to improve the assessment and management of the risks of serious harm to the public posed by some people on probation. The need for us to repeat them yet again raises questions as to whether HMPPS is learning the lessons of past mistakes. It is vital that they do so in the future.

Justin Russell 
HM Chief Inspector of Probation 

2. Background to the review 

On 26 June 2022, Ms Zara Aleena had been out socialising with a friend and was walking home in the early hours of Sunday morning in Ilford, Essex, when she was physically attacked and sexually assaulted. CCTV footage showed a white male, identified to be Jordan McSweeney (JM) following Ms Aleena and attacking her from behind. The victim suffered multiple injuries, including serious injuries to her head. She sadly passed away later in hospital. On 14 December 2022, JM was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 38 years. 

At the time the offence was committed, JM was supervised by the Probation Service – London region, having been released from custody on 17 June 2022. He had previously received a 16-month custodial sentence on 13 April 2022 for five counts of possession of an offensive weapon, three offences of criminal damage and one racially aggravated public order offence. All the index offences were committed whilst in custody serving a previous 32-month sentence for burglary. 

JM’s arrest for murder constituted a Serious Further Offence (SFO). SFOs are specific violent and sexual offences committed by people who are, or were very recently, under probation supervision at the time of the offence. They are committed by a small proportion of the probation caseload (fewer than 0.5 per cent) 1 however, while this percentage is small, for the victims and families involved, the impact and consequences are devastating and cannot be underestimated. 

An SFO review is triggered when a person is charged and appears in court for a qualifying offence alleged to have been committed while they were under probation supervision or within 28 working days of the supervision period terminating. These reviews are normally internal management reports conducted by the Probation Service itself but, occasionally, the Secretary of State for Justice asks HM Inspectorate of Probation to review a particular case, or aspects of a case, as he did in this instance on 01 July 2022. 

To inform this independent review, HM Inspectorate of Probation has reviewed the quality of the work undertaken by the Barking, Dagenham, and Havering (BDH) probation delivery unit (PDU), within the London Probation region (see annexe 1 for terms of reference). Current probation practice guidance, policy documents and relevant strategies have also been considered at a local, regional, and national level. Given JM had been released from custody 10 days prior to the SFO, practice and policy was also explored in HMP Belmarsh, by colleagues from His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prisons.

4. Summary of key findings: 

Our Inspectors have found that, overall, there were significant omissions and practice deficits which impacted on the management of this case, outlined in the summary below. 

Risk of serious harm – inaccurate assessments and underestimation of risk 

JM was managed as a “medium risk of serious harm Integrated Offender Management (IOM) acquisitive individual” however his level of risk should have been escalated to “high” in February 2021, based on the range of information available on his past history of violence as well as acquisitive offending. There was information known about risks present in custody, such as possession of weapons, violent and threatening behaviour. In addition, he had carried weapons in the community, as well as the risks posed to known adults. The risk to the public, staff and other prisoners, should have been assessed as high risk of serious harm. The risk of serious harm to known adults should also have been high based on information related to offences against a known female received in 2021, which later resulted in a restraining order being imposed. 

The risk should have been reviewed by the Community Rehabilitation Company (CRC) who were responsible for the case at that time. JM’s persistent poor behaviour in custody was seen in isolation and risk management in the community was not given sufficient consideration. The risk of harm posed was not viewed holistically in this case, with the focus being on acquisitive offending, and a thorough assessment of other presenting risk factors was missing. 

The lack of effective information sharing between prisons and probation contributed to an incomplete picture of JM’s risks and potential for violence and disruptive behaviour. The fact he spent a significant proportion of his adult years in custody made it difficult to gather significant information about his circumstances and potential behaviour in the community. This strengthens the need for effective information sharing to ensure all known risk factors, behaviours and intelligence is gathered to produce effective risk management plans to use both whilst in custody and when in the community. 

Had he been correctly assessed as high risk of serious harm – specifically in respect of other prisoners, staff, known adults and the public – the planning for release, licence conditions, reporting instructions, and action taken when he failed to attend on release could have been significantly different and potentially more urgent (for example following his failure to attend initial probation appointments on 17 and 20 June). He may also have been eligible for joint Multi Agency Public Protection (MAPPA) management, and for consideration for an Approved Premises (AP) placement, which would have afforded more monitoring of his risk in the community as well as opportunities for rehabilitation. 

With the correct risk assessment, it is likely that the level of monitoring through the IOM arrangements would have been enhanced, allowing timely responses to non-compliance but more importantly, contributing towards a release plan appropriate to the risk posed. 

A critical omission in the case was the failure to apply sufficient professional curiosity and management oversight to ensure all available information was analysed to assess the risk posed by Jordan McSweeney. This review identifies that a significant amount of information became known regarding his circumstances confirming that he was in a relationship, had a stepchild and deteriorating family dynamics, particularly regarding his mother. While information was recorded, there was little evidence of this being explored in any detail or informing assessments undertaken by agencies. This led to risk factors being assessed in isolation and not building a picture of the overall risk posed.

The inaccurate classification of risk was a key theme in our recent PDU inspections in London. Of the 137 medium risk of serious harm cases that were inspected across six local probation areas, seven per cent were deemed to have had their risk underestimated and should have been rated as high risk of serious harm rather than medium. Whilst this is only a sample, it does demonstrate the urgent need to ensure risk categorisations are accurate.

Case Allocation 

There were issues highlighted with the allocation of JM’s case. Although JM received 16-months in custody, taking into account his time spent on remand, he only had two months left to serve in prison at the point of his sentence and so his case should have been allocated directly to a community practitioner. The processes for allocating cases when a custodial sentence is imposed is confusing and cumbersome, impacting significantly on pre-release planning. Had allocation taken place correctly and earlier, probation staff would have had more opportunity to consider the risks posed by this individual and to amend the risk of serious harm assessment. As outlined above, this would have allowed for the exploration of other release arrangements and restrictive conditions. 

Enforcement decisions and recall process 

JM had a history of non-compliance. However, during his periods on licence, delayed decision-making by probation staff and ineffective management oversight resulted in non-compliance continuing without relevant action being taken. Following his release on 17 June, there were missed opportunities to recall JM following failed appointments and risk factors emerging. Recall should have been initiated following non-attendance on 20 June 2022, but management consultation did not consider recall and efforts made to locate JM were insufficient. 

When the recall was initiated on 22 June, this occurred following an informal discussion and PO1’s manager SPO1 was not fully included in the process. A delay to signing off the recall until 24 June, outside the 24-hour target specified in the related guidance , meant the recall was not timely and ultimately delayed the opportunity for JM to be arrested by police. 

Data indicates that the public protection casework section (PPCS), who process licence revocations in HMPPS, take an average of seven7 hours to issue a licence revocation. National data on recalls also shows that the median time8 between licence revocation and a return to prison custody is three days. Had a recall been initiated following the missed appointment on 20 June, or completed within the specified timescale on 23 June, the time for police to locate and arrest JM would have been maximised. 

Diverse needs 

Throughout the records relating to JM, differing needs are highlighted. At different junctures records stated JM had Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Personality Disorder (PD) and had suffered from depression. He was stated to be medicated at various times for ADHD, but little analysis was undertaken of how this affected his day-to-day cognitive functioning and learning styles, and if there were links with offending behaviour.

5. Recommendations 

Between July and October 2022 HM Inspectorate of Probation inspected six PDUs in the London Region. Barking, Dagenham and Havering PDU was one of those inspected, many of the findings from this independent review mirror those from the London PDU inspections9 . They focus on critical concerns such as the quality of work to assess and manage risk of serious harm, the delivery of interventions, information sharing between agencies, quality assurance processes and management oversight, staff training and development, and resourcing and retention of staff. These recommendations are relevant to the practice observed in the case of JM. It is crucial that the service deals with these broader issues to address the practice deficits, and wider systemic issues identified in this independent review.

Notably, some recommendations in this report mirror what has previously been recommended by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of probation, particularly in the independent review of Joseph McCann . It is therefore imperative that these are actioned urgently given they have been highlighted previously as recommendations. 

This independent review makes a further nine recommendations specific to the case of JM.

HMPPS should: 

1. conduct a thorough, senior led review of the processes its staff use to assess the risks of harm that people on probation may pose to others, to ensure that all staff understand and apply the correct criteria for identifying high risk of serious harm cases and that this then informs robust and appropriate risk management plans and regular reviews. This action should be conducted urgently 

2. implement effective arrangements to ensure all risk of harm assessments, including at pre-sentence stage, are quality assured for accuracy until regular and appropriate management oversight arrangements are established, given the national staffing resource shortage and middle management oversight limitations 

3. develop processes to ensure all known information on past behaviour or current risks in prison or the community is available to probation practitioners and is properly analysed when formulating risk assessments pre and post sentence 

4. create robust processes to record and analyse on probation case files when a person on probation is acquitted of offence(s) and where information remains relevant to inform risk of harm assessment and management 

5. while cases are in custody ensure timely and accurate allocation of each case to probation practitioners in the community for supervision before and after release and a mechanism for checking this process 

6. undertake an urgent review of processes for information and intelligence sharing between prisons and the probation service to be completed by June 2023. (A recommendation from the independent review of McCann, this should be given urgent attention given issues are still apparent). 

7. develop processes to ensure that all recall decisions are signed off and submitted by Senior Probation Officers within the 24-hour target period – with compliance against this target monitored in every Probation Delivery Unit on at least a monthly basis 

8. ensure that data on the time from licence revocation by HMPPS Public Protection Casework Section to an individual being received into prison custody is monitored on a regular basis by HMPPS jointly with the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) and that joint probation and police plans are agreed for maximising performance against this metric 

9. ensure the EPF2 tool is used when determining licence conditions and develop a mechanism for effective management oversight of this process to ensure that all appropriate licence conditions, including GPS tagging, are applied after release 

10. develop a London wide initiative on neurodiversity and invest in trauma informed training for staff.

14. ‘Early Look’ and onward actions 

Following JM’s arrest for murder, an ‘early look’ SFO review was completed by the Probation Service – London region in June 2022 in line with HMPPS expected practice. The purpose of an ‘early look’ is to quickly review the practice in the case and promptly identify, to senior leaders within HMPPS, any practice and training deficits that require immediate attention and to begin appropriate actions, and human resource (HR) processes if assessed as being necessary. Inspectors found the quality of the ‘early look’ to be mostly of a sufficient standard. However, on further exploration, some information contained within it, and therefore subsequent actions, were inaccurate. This related specifically to the following: 

The assessment undertaken at Court as part of the allocation process was inaccurate as it pulled through information from historic assessments that required updating. Whilst PO2 was limited by the fact that he did not have the opportunity to meet with JM, the offence analysis did not relate to the index offences and I would have expected this to have been updated.

Having spoken with PO2 and the line manager, and considered the guidance in place, PO2 was required to undertake an “RSR only” OASys which does not require a full review. The process requires an OASys assessment to be generated solely for this calculation, to determine allocation. There is no expectation of court officers to undertake a review of risk. We found that although the correct process was followed here, the process led to inaccurate information being contained within assessments but in line with guidance, should have been updated by the receiving COM or POM. 

The ‘early look’ also indicated that the inclusion of a licence condition to engage with Catch 22 was not appropriate as their remit was to support people to build emotional resilience. We disagreed with this, as it was clear this would be of benefit to JM. However, we did agree other conditions were omitted which would have been beneficial to risk management, such as the imposition of a curfew/GPS tagging. 

When considering the recall prior to the SFO, the ‘early look’ states SPO1 was included in the discussion on 22 June, however on further investigation we know this did not occur, with them only being informed by PO1 a recall was being completed. Actions relating to management oversight and recall processes which were highlighted in the ‘early look’ have already been progressed. 

Following this, HR investigations procedures were initiated in respect of two staff members. These have now concluded, with no further action taken in either case. 

In respect of other areas which have been highlighted as significant in this review, we discussed work that is underway to address some of the deficits. We were told there are significant changes being made to IOM case management in London, in particular work is underway to improve liaison between prisons and IOM colleagues. With regards to neurodiversity, the Head of Operations for north east London boroughs (HOOP) told us there are aims to embed a trauma-informed approach to practice, and projects are already set up in some areas of London focussing on specific needs particularly in respect of young adults.

Although not eligible for OMiC management, the effectiveness of this process is under review by HM Inspectorate of probation with a number of recommendations to review the process which aim for improvements across the OMiC spectrum .

15. Conclusion 

Inspectors found that overall, there were significant omissions and practice deficits which impacted on the management of this case. 

JM was managed as a “medium risk of serious harm IOM acquisitive individual,” however, his level of risk should have been escalated to high risk of serious harm in February 2021, based on the range of information available had it have been sufficiently analysed and considered.

The risks present when he was recalled, in February 2021, were not sufficiently considered for a potential escalation to high risk of serious harm and management by the then National Probation Service. When a restraining order (RO) was imposed in 2021, the PDU were not sufficiently aware which was another missed opportunity to reassess the risk posed. Furthermore, JM’s persistent poor behaviour in custody was seen in isolation and not given sufficient consideration in terms of his risk management in the community. 

Issues were found with sharing of information between prison and probation and assessments were completed in isolation. This led to agencies managing the individual without thorough consideration of the impact on the risks posed, and how they should be managed, both in a custodial and community setting. 

A lack of professional curiosity coupled with a failure to consider information known about JM holistically, led to inaccurate and insufficient risk assessments. There was a significant amount of information known about JM which should have been analysed and explored more fully.

The delay in JM’s case being allocated to a probation officer meant his case was not formally allocated for two months following sentencing. Positively, PO1 continued to work with JM and did undertake some pre-release planning. However, given the delay in allocation, a pre-release assessment was not completed prior to release. This was a missed opportunity to review all the available information and inform pre-release planning and the risk of serious harm assessment. Tools such as the EPF tool which was developed by the probation service to determine relevant licence conditions was not utilised and therefore not all relevant conditions were included. 

On release, the PDU missed opportunities to recall following failed appointments and evidence of risk factors emerging, such as significant use of alcohol. A recall should have been initiated following the missed appointment on 20 June 2022. However, relevant senior leader consultations did not take place, and insufficient efforts were made to locate JM. When the recall was initiated, this was because of an informal discussion and PO1’s line manager was not included formally in the process. A delay to signing off the recall, 24 hours later than the specified timescale, meant the recall was not timely and ultimately delayed the opportunity for JM to be arrested by police. 

The findings from this review mirror findings from the recent HM Inspectorate of probation inspections of London PDUs, including Barking, Dagenham and Havering (BDH) PDU where the overall quality of work delivered to manage people on probation was insufficient and we rated the PDU as ‘Requires improvement’.

32 comments:

  1. From BBC website:-

    Mr Russell's report described how his case was allocated to a probation officer only nine days before he left prison, meaning there was little time for planning his supervision.

    Information about some of McSweeney's violent behaviour, including the details of a restraining order taken out against him in 2021, was not part of his probation assessment, the report found. Where he was going to stay was not known at the point of his release, and he was not monitored with an electronic tag.

    'Unmanageable workloads'
    McSweeney's licence was soon revoked because of his failure to attend any meetings with probation officers, however it was not decided he should be recalled to prison until 24 June, the report said. He murdered Ms Aleena two days later. One worker faced disciplinary action over the case.

    "Once that decision (to recall McSweeney) had been made, there were also delays in signing the necessary paperwork to initiate the recall. Had this been done sooner, opportunities for the police to locate and arrest McSweeney would have been maximised," the report said.

    McSweeney had been assessed as medium risk because his offences, his behaviour in prison and his criminal history were "reviewed in isolation", Mr Russell's report found. It said that if the Probation Service had correctly assigned McSweeney as high risk, more urgent action may have been taken after his release.

    "The Probation Service failed to do so, and he was free to commit this most heinous crime on an innocent young woman," Mr Russell said.

    "Our independent review brings into sharp focus the consequences of these missed opportunities and reveals a Probation Service in London under the mounting pressure of heavy workloads and high vacancy rates."

    The Ministry of Justice said fewer than than 0.5% of the 200,000-plus offenders subject to probation supervision every year were convicted of another serious offence.

    Mr Russell said London had a high Probation Service vacancy rate, of about 500 people, when Ms Aleena was murdered in June, and the Barking, Dagenham and Havering probation unit responsible for McSweeney's supervision was operating at a capacity of 64% and therefore had "unmanageable workloads".

    The problem is "systemic" across England and Wales, with 10 out of 17 areas being rated as inadequate, mainly due to concerns over risk management and planning, Mr Russell's report found.

    The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said the "failure" of the probation service in this case was "symptomatic of wider issues" and blamed "government policies and cuts".

    "This must never be allowed to happen again," Mr Khan said.

    "Women and girls have the right to be safe and to feel safe - whatever the time of day and wherever they are. But for these failings, Zara would still be here and her loved ones would not have to bear the burden of a life without her," he added.

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    1. The report makes nine recommendations, among them a call for an urgent senior-led review to ensure all staff understand the difference between high and medium-risk offenders.

      Ian Lawrence, general secretary of the probation and family court union Napo, said he would not blame staff who were "doing their best trying to hold the service together".

      "I think the blame for this systemic failure lies firmly at the hands of the secretary of state for justice, and I want that secretary of state to meet with me, and practitioners, so they can get an idea of how hard it is at the front line."

      Prisons and Probation Minister Damian Hinds said the government was taking "immediate steps to address the serious issues raised" by the McSweeney and Damien Bendall cases.

      Mr Hinds said this involved the instigation of mandatory training to improve risk assessments and the implementation of new processes to guarantee the swift recall of offenders.

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  2. Another heartbreaking read. I note the inspectorate continues to push the professional curiosity agenda, but without acknowledging what is needed for professional curiosity to be possible (somewhat ironic given they published an Academic Insights paper that outlines research on this).
    Yet again there is a focus on the accuracy of risk assessments and yet I see nothing in the recommendations urging a review of the risk assessment tool the service is apparently clinging to like a security blanket. When will there be a robust inquiry into the suitability of OASys? It has been questioned at recurrent NAPO AGMs by practitioners who know it is no longer fit for purpose but still no concerted from NAPO on this issue. If the inspectorate is independent (debatable), why are they too turning a blind eye?
    Assessment tools are not the answer to the problems we see right now in the service, but neither are the inspectorate’s recommendations relating to the whole scale scrutiny of risk assessments. Yet again, this situates the blame with the individual practitioner as opposed to the wholly untenable situation they are working in with woefully inadequate and outdated tools.

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  3. NapoNews:-

    His Majesties Inspector of Probation (HMIP) has today published a report into the tragic death of Ms Zara Aleena at the hands of Jordan McSweeney last summer. The findings are highly critical of a number of Agencies responsible for the incarceration and supervision of the perpetrator before the case reached the London Probation Service prior to this heinous offence being committed.

    Ian Lawrence General Secretary of Napo, representing Probation staff in the London Region, has claimed that the HMIP report confirms the Union’s long standing warnings to Government Ministers over the likely impact on public safety of the previous decision to part-privatise the service, inadequate exchange of information relating to risk between Prison and Probation and an acute staffing crisis across the whole of the Probation Service.

    Mr Lawrence said: “The release of yet another damning report from the Probation Inspector about the supervision of the perpetrator throughout their journey in the Criminal Justice system, lays bare the fact that the London Probation Service is suffering from an acute staffing crisis.

    “There are huge numbers of unfilled vacancies and staff absences due to stress and overwork which directly impact on the quality of supervision that our members are desperately trying to provide.”

    The HMIP report makes repeated references to previous findings by the Inspectorate about the critical shortages of experienced probation staff in London and the overload on supervising officers.

    Last week, another report commissioned by the London Assembly into the provision of Probation Services in London arrived at similar conclusions.

    Mr Lawrence went on to say: “The thoughts of Napo members obviously go to the family of Ms Aleena at this hugely difficult time. Napo are totally committed to the campaign to protect Women and young Girls from male violence.

    “Unfortunately this Government’s failure to learn the lessons of their 7-year experiment to privatise the service and put it into the hands of profiteers was a disaster that we are still trying to repair and they have much to answer for.

    “I am asking the Secretary of State to meet with me and our members at the front face of operations to tell us how he is going to provide the investment that the Probation Service so desperately needs.”

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    1. Here is a news response from Lawrence. What he fails as usual to mention is he has not done enough. Not fought aggressively not argued properly and caved in at every point. If the union were led properly members would fight willingly . This Napo insincerity is opportune old arguments that he did not resist properly . Friendly accords in bad agreements the management then abandon because they know this guy folds and so the staff remain trodden on. Victims will increase and the service rendered benign just like Napo.

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    2. I hear he might be facing a competition for his post.

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    3. Hoorah that thank crikey I will happily vote anyone else. No wonder they nowt on Monday 16 I was watching . Yeah hay Napo could be restored without him I would rejoin and work on the real come back . Who is standing not an internal please.

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  4. This makes for stark reading, especially when you contrast it with the views expressed by Amy Rees. It comes back to a point made earlier in the month about honesty and accountability. HMPPS is fundamentally a dishonest organisation. It fails to own the mistakes it has made in the past and wilfully refuses to acknowledge that these failures are the responsibility of senior managers. Rather it prefers to point the finger at staff lower down the food chain. These SFOs are a resigning matter. But as we have seen in the wider political environment integrity is in short supply at the moment.

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  5. From a blog post by Joshua Rozenberg:-

    “We are taking immediate steps to address the serious issues raised by the Jordan McSweeney and Damien Bendall cases,” Hinds responded in a statement to reporters. “This includes mandatory training to improve risk assessments, implementing new processes to guarantee the swift recall of offenders and we have taken disciplinary action where appropriate.” The Ministry of Justice published an action plan accepting the chief inspector’s recommendations.

    You might have expected the latest apology to come from Dominic Raab rather than from one of his ministers. But I don’t think the justice secretary is entirely to blame for these failings — or, at least, not this justice secretary.

    It was Chris Grayling, one of his predecessors, who split a probation system that had been organised on regional lines into a National Probation Service which would deal only with the most serious offenders and a series of community rehabilitation companies that were to be were paid by results. This all started in 2014.

    Grayling’s reforms were heavily criticised and had to be reversed in 2018. David Gauke, that year’s justice secretary,1 terminated the community rehabilitation companies’ contracts 14 months early. A national Probation Service was reinstated in June 2021.

    Although Grayling’s decision to part-privatise probation was rushed though without being tested, it would not be fair to make even him shoulder all the blame for its failings. When Grayling became justice secretary in 2012, he found his department’s budget had been heavily cut. That was because his predecessor Ken Clarke — now Lord Clarke of Nottingham — had enthusiastically agreed to a 22% reduction in spending after taking office in 2010.

    As I wrote at the time, justice is not a service that could safely be handed over to the private sector. Clarke’s cuts to the core functions of criminal justice would be “at his peril”.

    Except that it’s not usually the justice secretary who is in peril when a service such as probation is underfunded and then hollowed out. It’s the women and children who are savagely murdered because the Probation Service has failed in its duty to protect them.

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  6. The report makes a recommendation for all staff to understand the difference between medium and high risk offenders. Under HMPPS this will never ever happen! As a recently retired PO of 20 years experience I'm appalled to hear that Prison Officer POMs are supporting/advising newly recruited POMs through the minefield of OASY assessments! Absolute madness and all the more concerning that SPOs actively encourage it! Wouldn't want to miss there targets now would they!

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  7. Damian Hinds is to give a statement in parliament today regarding the inspectorate report on this SFO. I'm not sure at what time he will deliver it, but it will be interesting to see how Tory MPs respond, given they universally supported Chris Graylings 'gut feeling' on bringing about TR.

    'Getafix

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  8. Also mentioned to say...
    With risk assessments being put on the table for questioning, wouldn't this be the ideal time to demand that the government publish their own full assessment on the risks that TR posed if implemented?
    To my knowledge, that's a document that's never been published.

    'Getafix

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    1. Oh you mean the document that was published on here.

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    2. Alan Travis writing in the Guardian 24/06/2013:-

      Privatising probation service will put public at risk, officials tell Grayling

      The justice secretary, Chris Grayling, has been warned by his most senior officials that plans to privatise 70% of the probation service lack support, are being pushed through on an aggressive timetable and potentially endanger public safety, leaked documents show. They also warn that promised cost savings are unlikely to be achieved.

      The official internal risk register for Grayling's "rehabilitation revolution", which he has so far refused to publish, warns that there is a more than 80% risk that his proposals will lead to "an unacceptable drop in operational performance" triggering "delivery failures and reputational damage".

      The cost of failures in the probation service have been illustrated by cases such as those of Anthony Rice, who sadistically murdered Naomi Bryant in 2005, after being released from prison on a life licence, and Daniel Sonnex, who tortured and murdered two French students in 2008 after blunders in his probation supervision.

      The warnings are contained in a document marked "restricted policy", prepared for the Ministry of Justice board responsible for the rehabilitation programme. It also says there is a high risk of insufficient support within the probation service to push through the changes.

      Grayling's proposals are the most radical in the probation service's 100-year history. They involve abolishing the existing 35 public probation trusts and replacing them with 21 government companies, which will tender out the supervision of all medium and low-risk offenders on a payment-by-results basis. But the officials warn that it is likely that the transfer of 70% of probation work to the private and voluntary sectors will fail to deliver the promised scale of savings.

      A second leaked document, dated June 2013, on the future of the much smaller public probation service that would be responsible for the remaining 30% of work with high-risk offenders and public protection cases, shows that it faces cuts of 19% by 2017/18.

      The shake-up would result in reallocating the supervision of 250,000 offenders, moving 18,000 staff to new employers and the appointment of 22 senior management teams. The plan is to put the changes in place by October, so the new service is up and running by the general election in 2015 – "a complex, large-scale change programme to be completed within an aggressive timetable," the risk register notes.

      The disclosures come as peers prepare for a key vote on Tuesdayon Grayling's offender rehabilitation bill which provides the legal framework for the proposals. Among the concerns expressed by the authors of the risk register are the "considerable challenge" of closing down 2,000 separate computer packages and moving to a single shared services computer system.

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    3. The document also reveals that while many probation trusts are continuing to voice concerns about the proposals, nearly all are actively making preparations: "Our concerns focus on some trusts whose senior staff seem less able to make the transition themselves. Although these senior staff recognise their responsibility, as public servants, to manage the process of change, there is a difference between managing change and leading it."

      The risk register uses traffic lights to describe the risks facing the programme, coding each risk factor as green, amber, red or black, but makes no assessment of the financial risk of not delivering the programme to the agreed timescale, quality or cost. It appears that detailed Treasury approval for the proposals will only be secured after the framework bill reaches the statute book.

      The senior MoJ officials rate the risk that a campaign against the proposals will delay or block them in parliament as a "code red". They reveal that the bill being debated in the House of Lords this week has deliberately been kept slim to "minimise the dependence of the reforms" on the passing of the legislation. Media messaging is also being used to "keep key elements of reform at the top of the agenda".

      The register also makes clear there are anxieties at the highest level that not enough private sector and voluntary organisations will bid for the work (code red) and that once privatised the supervision programmes will be ineffective or fail to meet the required quality.

      The highest rated concerns – code black – detailed in the document are:
      There is a more than 80% risk that an unacceptable drop in operational performance will lead to delivery failure and reputational damage. The report says the failures could be caused by industrial action, falling staff morale, staff departures or probation leadership disengaging.
      There is a 51% to 80% risk that insufficient support for the proposals by probation management and staff will lead to failure to implement the changes properly and on time.
      There is a 51% to 80% risk that cost savings will not be met.
      Harry Fletcher, a criminal justice expert, said the documents showed that the plans were ill-thought through and potentially dangerous: "Probation's sell-off is being carried out too hastily, there is too much risk. It is highly likely that service delivery will collapse and public protection will be undermined. The government must think again about the future of its successful and efficient probation service."

      Alan Travis

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    4. Sorry Jim.
      I'll try and keep up a bit better!

      'Getafix

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    5. You do a fantastic job and I wasn't being sarcastic. A copy was handed to me late at night in a multi-storey carpark, thus fulfilling a childish fantasy.

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    6. I didn't take it as sarcasm Jim, but I am puzzled as to where the last 10 years have gone!

      'Getafix

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  9. Theresa Villiars lauding Will Jones in Parliament - who knew!

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  10. Incredulous as we watch another scandal break on the Probation Service. More training? Whats the point if you dont have enough staff and the staff you don have are overloaded with work. PS doesnt take sickness into account so lots of offices are just getting by, add the new mandatory training will make the work load worse. I also suspect it will push up the number of high risk cases. So caseloads will be flooded with lots of high risks, with no time to work with them. A sad bitter joke

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  11. Absolutely heartbreaking appalling murder. No finger pointed at McSweeney? It’s a blame culture. We need divorce from HMPPS, possibly go back to trusts. Assessment tools probably need revising but let’s not blame tools. Let’s look at caseload pressures, retention of staff , training. How many times have we heard look on equip for answers .
    Pull those on cushy secondments pointless training development posts get them back in frontline. I’ve heard a number of times from pom staff about lack of oasys training … ignore sections 2-13 concentration to be on RMP . Those sections inform risk management.
    Stop driving target driven performance get back to basics of the core relationship between practitioner and case.
    Get back to those in management to have a minimum of frontline experience in different settings .
    We said at the time of TR it’s a car crash waiting to happen and low and behold …
    We said being swallowed by HMPPS would be a car crash
    I think we need a stronger voice a real identity . Let’s stop blaming frontline staff who are often ill equipped to assess risk accurately with the of course the oversight of management . That’s not the practitioners fault it’s the system .
    Bring back the opportunity for good practice sharing, workshops etc
    But let’s also hold the perpetrators accountable

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  12. Expect even more time in front of the computer not getting to know the punters

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  13. Something is seriously wrong. The probation service cannot recruit or retain staff for the simple reason that pay and working conditions are poor.

    There’s so many recommendations that HMIP, Napo and Damian Hinds ignore.

    1. Pay better Probation wages.
    2. Provide better Probation training.
    3. Stop blaming Probation staff for organisational failures.

    Instead Probation employees of all grades continue to leave hand over fist for better paid jobs. Probation Officer training is dumbed down so much that qualified Probation Officer’s cannot hack it even though the Edward Crisp’s and Eric Beckford’s among us spin a nice fairytale. Hardworking probation staff are routinely thrown under the bus for failure while Probation Senior Managers namely Will Jones are awarded MBEs despite “leading” the two offices in London with the worst HMIP inspection results.

    https://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/local-news/peterborough-probation-officer-hopes-inspire-26030250.amp

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2mq41sj8ufE

    https://www.gmb.org.uk/network/public-services-section/probation-noticeboard

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  14. Pay better wages, treat the staff better and probation will get better staff. The average TFL train driver salary range is £57,217 to £61,620.

    Probation Officer – London
    London
    £30,812 - £38,289
    You must hold a Probation Officer qualification or be a qualified Probation Officer. In addition, successful candidates must hold the following: PQF Honours Degree/Graduate Diploma and Level 5 Diploma in Probation Practice; or Diploma in Probation Studies; or Diploma in Social Work (Probation option); or CQSW (Probation option)

    Probation Services Officer – London
    London
    £23,637 - £29,046
    Minimum 2 GCSE’s at Grade C or above, including English, Maths or the ability to evidence high level numeracy and literacy skills required to read.

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  15. This situation cannot continue for much longer. There is an opportunity for a PO, recently retired or otherwise having left the service, to confidentially help an experienced journalist write a hopefully in-depth article about what's going on, why the wheels are coming off and what needs to happen to fix things. Contact details on Profile page if you are interested and would like to be considered.

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    1. It will need more than 1 po.

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    2. It won't happen, all people do is moan

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  16. Lets all take a breath and acknowledge that there is only one person responsible for this heinous act and that is perpetrator. By not doing so we absolve him of it ( responsibility ). Then for me there is an elephant in the room that requires a deeper dive and that is the sentence itself be it a licence condition or supervision. In relation to the last I fundamentally believe that Probation was never designed for today's offending population ! i.e. the nature of offending has changed. Then I move to the risk assessments cited in the media and the categorisation of this person as medium risk. I do so against the background of London's offending profile. In other areas this person may have very well been high risk but on a London caseload there is very little that makes him unusual or notable. This is a nuance that inspection after inspection does not take into consideration or seek to address and its a conversation that must be had if London is to survive.

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    1. Sensible against the backdrop pos think they are qualified for everything in the universe. Get them to understand and work to a standard.

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    2. "In other areas this person may have very well been high risk but on a London caseload there is very little that makes him unusual or notable."

      Bullshit.

      It might be that being in a large city with areas of significant economic difficulty & other forms of diminished opportunity or support increases the risks of an individual's exposure to & involvement in criminal activity, but that doesn't *reduce* the risks posed by any individual with an active history of violence & use of weapons. Assessing an individual's risk to others is not an exact science, is not easy & is not ameliorated if someone lives in the London area.

      The algorithms & faux science of the interminable OASys & ever growing associated assessments are bad enough, without adding "London weighting".

      London (City? Greater? Inner?) *may* have higher numbers of more serious cases for all I know; in which case 'London' needs more staff qualified to manage such cases, not a bespoke risk assessment tool.

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    3. That’s a very good point. Out of interest, although some years ago, I analysed the figures for MAPPA level 2 and level 3 cases across a number of regions. As you might imagine the figures showed a significant lack of consistency between a range of Trusts. In fact we couldn’t get consistency across my own Trust let alone any of the others. I worked out that if MAPPA case meandered across the country they would in likelihood go from level 1, to Level 3 depending on where they chose to settle. When I looked more closely at this it was apparent that the risk assessment was one of the main factors leading to this lack of consistency. Perception of risk was filtered against the backdrop of the kinds of cases a Trust was used to dealing with. In one case a Level 3 case supervised in a rural area wouldn’t have reached the threshold for level 2 in my area. Which was significantly urban. Pundits talk about risk assessment as though it was a scientific process that has either a right or wrong answer. As we know this is simply not the case. The problem stems from how the modern probation service allocates limited resources. If it does this purely on the risk a case poses it is more likely to finish up in a mess. You may be allocated more time for high risk cases etc, but in many cases a low or medium risk case may require a significantly higher input based on need. The HMPPS misunderstood this and for whatever reason felt the could bring order to something that by its very nature is a lot messier.

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  17. @17.47. Could not agree more. And it actually does need a bespoke risk assessment tool. Completely agree the point about resources and risk and that is one of the fundamental issues. Perception is important and if the majority of your cases are like this person it becomes run of the mill. It may shock others but there are people on standalone UPW requirements in London with very similar offending histories. That is why more resource needs to be allocated to low and medium. Especially when they are transferring from YOT,s

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