I'm afraid my patience has run out entirely in respect of the Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood and her latest 'unpaid work is too lenient' nonsense, thus further stoking up right wing rhetoric in response to Reform. With a heavy heart I now feel I have no option but to admit this Labour government hasn't got a clue as far as probation is concerned. There's clearly not going to be any enlightened probation reforms and astonishingly the Gauke Sentencing Report is likely to be rejected as too enlightened!
As far as I can see, Lord Timpson is going to have a hard time convincing the probation establishment gathering for the 2025 Bill McWilliams lecture in Cambridge on July 11th that probation has any meaningful future at all.
Convicted criminals could be told to fill potholes and clean bins under plans the government is understood to be developing.
As first reported by the Sun on Sunday, the Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood is said to want to expand unpaid work, which she believes to be too lenient. She is understood to want probation teams to work with councils, so that local authorities are able to assign jobs to offenders. Private companies would also be able to employ those who are on community sentences. Offenders would not be paid wages, but the money earned would be paid into a fund for victim's groups.
It comes as prisons across the country are struggling to deal with overcrowding after the number of offenders behind bars hit a new high. A government source said: "With prisons so close to collapse, we are going to have to punish more offenders outside of prison. "We need punishment to be more than just a soft option or a slap on the wrist. If we want to prove that crime doesn't pay, we need to get offenders working for free - with the salary they would have been paid going back to their victims." They added this meant doing the jobs the public "really want them to do - not just scrubbing graffiti, but filling up potholes and cleaning the bins".
Writing for the Telegraph, external, Ms Mahmood, who describes herself as a "card-carrying member" of her party's "law and order wing", said that "tough community orders work." An independent review of sentencing carried out by the former Conservative justice secretary David Gauke is expected to be published this week. It was commissioned last year after overcrowding led to the early release of thousands of prisoners.
Gauke is understood to be considering recommending the idea of scrapping short prison terms as part of the sentencing review, and is likely to recommend more community-based sentencing to reduce the reliance on imprisonment. In an interim report, Gauke warned that unless radical changes were made, prisons in England and Wales could run out of cells by early next year.
Ms Mahmood warned that he would "have to recommend bold, and sometimes difficult, measures". In her article, she pointed to examples such as the system in Texas, where she said "offenders who comply with prison rules earn an earlier release, while those who don't are locked up for longer". On Wednesday, she announced more than a thousand inmates will be released early to free up spaces in prisons in England and Wales, and that a £4.7bn investment will be used to fund more prisons.
Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick said the announcement was "failing to protect the public" - adding "to govern is to choose, and today she's chosen to release early criminals who've reoffended or breached their licences".
Ms Mahmood warned that he would "have to recommend bold, and sometimes difficult, measures". In her article, she pointed to examples such as the system in Texas, where she said "offenders who comply with prison rules earn an earlier release, while those who don't are locked up for longer". On Wednesday, she announced more than a thousand inmates will be released early to free up spaces in prisons in England and Wales, and that a £4.7bn investment will be used to fund more prisons.
Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick said the announcement was "failing to protect the public" - adding "to govern is to choose, and today she's chosen to release early criminals who've reoffended or breached their licences".
--oo00oo--
Postscript
My Twitter account has either been hacked, deactivated, lost or deleted which is very annoying, but then Elon Musk has completely rubbished it anyway, so seeing as Virgin have lost my email account as well, I'll just accept it all as confirmation that trying to save Probation is fast becoming a lost cause and I'll just shout into an empty ether....
Comment left on previous post:-
ReplyDeleteSeriously? Mahmood wants 'offenders' on unpaid work to fill potholes and 'clean bins'! So basically taking the jobs of those already fixing the roads. And 'cleaning bins'? I'm sure members of the public will love having their bins cleaned outside their houses by convicted burglars! Maybe a quick bit of restorative justice could take place at the same time! I think I'll opt out of that but could be handy for a quick 'check in' with a person on probation. Honestly Mahmood, at least think of the logistics before announcing your latest brainwave!
"We need punishment to be more than just a soft option or a slap on the wrist... offenders who comply with prison rules earn an earlier release, while those who don't are locked up for longer"
ReplyDeleteMs Mahmood... describes herself as a "card-carrying member" of her party's "law and order wing"
Based upon the above, I'd describe her as an uneducated, blinkered bully who has no place holding the position of justice sec.
Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick said the announcement was "failing to protect the public"
ReplyDeleteUnlike you, eh, Bobby?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-66132158
"Minister Robert Jenrick ordered painting over of child asylum unit murals"
Mr Jenrick, the Immigration Minister, had ordered the removal of the murals because they were thought to be too welcoming... "I did feel that it was important that at the initial point of arrival, we treat these places as law-enforcement environments with a view to trying to weed out those people who are actually just posing as children."
By contrast...
"Robert Jenrick says Star of David should be displayed at every point of entry to the UK... he wanted Britain to be “the most welcoming country in the world for Israelis and the Jewish community”... [he] also used his remarks to promise that, if he became prime minister, he would move the British embassy to Jerusalem."
Such a balanced individual with public safety at heart:
Jan 2025: Kemi Badenoch has defended Robert Jenrick after he described Britons of Pakistani origin as “people from alien cultures”... Samuel Kasumu, a former Tory adviser on race issues, said Jenrick’s comments were highly divisive and risked people getting killed.
It wouldn't be that he's just another self-absorbed grifter, would it?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-53007018
"Downing Street has defended Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick after Labour accused him of avoiding scrutiny over his approval of a £1bn property scheme.... Mr Jenrick granted permission on 14 January for Richard Desmond's company Northern & Shell to build on the Westferry Printworks site on east London's Isle of Dogs.... Mr Desmond made a personal donation to the Conservatives two weeks later, on 28 January. The property development was approved the day before the introduction of a new council community levy which would have meant the company paying an additional £40m."
Jim PostScript above all else you have tried hardest. Saving probation has been handicapped by Napo collusion with the employers. JB has dedicated private retirement life to saving his passion our old school work values ethics and principle. New staff have no values than cash. The system has decayed and our older values trashed by Napo the failing to take principle cases to law has left us defenceless to employers. JB blog gave a window of faith support and activism to record the dissent despair and outrage yet they continued and seemingly now gotten away with destroying old probation. Napo employers Romeo Mahmood labour all vision less myopic to the value of what probation could have achieved. Well done Jim it's not over yet though.
ReplyDeleteIt’s farcical. Mahmood surfaces weekly with failed policies about building new prisons and repeated news stories about hiring “1,000 new probation officers.”
ReplyDeleteTimpson, handed a lordship, to be dispatched around the country to repeat the same anecdote, “my dad employs offenders”, as though that alone constitutes a strategy. The novelty wore off long ago.
Gauge’s review, regardless of its content, will be quietly shelved while Labour fights off Farage and Reform on the right flank.
Labour hasn’t been Labour for a long while. I won’t be attending the 2025 Bill McWilliams lecture just to hear more of Timpson’s political propaganda and empty platitudes.
Bring back the Chain Gangs! I knew I shouldn't have watched the Shawshank Redemption last night...
ReplyDeleteHuzzah! Prison works, probation is shit... so lets monetise crime & reward victimhood with cash:
ReplyDelete* A government source said: "With prisons so close to collapse, we are going to have to punish more offenders outside of prison. "We need punishment to be more than just a soft option or a slap on the wrist. If we want to prove that crime doesn't pay, we need to get offenders working for free - with the salary they would have been paid going back to their victims."
How about "if we want to prove that crime doesn't pay" then we will no longer pursue a two-tier society, we will cease & desist from celebritising crime & we will:
* stop lying to the electorate
* take our elected roles seriously
* stop fiddling our expenses & generally address the malaise of greed in our own house
* stop colluding with corprate raids on the public purse
* impose taxes commensurate with the resources of the ultra wealthy
* invest in the country viz-health, education, housing, rehabilitation, etc
* show respect for other human beings regardless of skin colour, country of origin, religious belief, gender, designated sex at birth
* stop funding & supporting war criminals
* live within our means by way of setting an example
* respect victims & ensure that justice is fairly implemented
just a thought.
In her article, she pointed to examples such as the system in Texas, where she said "offenders who comply with prison rules earn an earlier release, while those who don't are locked up for longer". ….well that’s all the OCGs out early then….
ReplyDeletejenrick's track record as a hatemonger & law-breaker himself when a minister (illegal travel during covid times, manipulation of planning laws for himself & wealthy chums, claiming eye-watering expenses for a constituency property he rarely uses when he owns at least four multi-million properties) means he has no legitimate voice when it comes to speaking about protecting the public, let alone the concept of justice.
ReplyDeletesadly mahmood & timpson are feeding him lines, which makes it easy for him to plant his flag & preach.
As we all know, prison works.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cps.gov.uk/london-south/news/updated-sentence-prison-officer-who-was-filmed-having-sex-inmate-convicted
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czd5r3m6rz6o
Prison officers deal drugs and ask inmates for sex, BBC told
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/05/18/ex-warden-who-slept-with-prisoner-wanted-a-stable-life/
"A disgraced prison officer who slept with an inmate has said she did it because she wanted a stable life... [she] had a six-month relationship with Trengrove while working as a warden at HMP The Verne, on the Isle of Portland in Dorset... In an interview with MailOnline, she said she was relieved not to be imprisoned. She added that she knew Trengrove was a sex offender before the relationship began but said he had told her he was framed."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c991y2871r1o
"A prison governor who had a relationship with a drug-dealing gang boss has been jailed for nine years.
Kerri Pegg, 42, was seen as a "rising star" of the Prison Service, climbing the career ladder from graduate to governor at HMP Kirkham in Lancashire in six years."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czen3ez70x1o
"A prison officer who smuggled drugs into her workplace in a Pot Noodle has been jailed for more than three years."
https://www.cps.gov.uk/cps/news/prison-officer-caught-class-drugs-jailed-six-years
"A former prison officer from South Wales has been jailed for six years after large amount of controlled drugs were found in her car."
https://www.itv.com/news/granada/2024-06-19/prison-officer-jailed-for-smuggling-over-100000-worth-of-drugs-into-jail
https://www.copfs.gov.uk/about-copfs/news/2023-02-prison-officer-jailed-for-smuggling-drugs-to-inmates/
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/sep/01/rise-in-prison-officers-contraband-smuggling
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/27/organised-crime-gangs-uk-sending-recruits-to-train-as-prison-officers-union-warns
Some of those reports remind me off the time I worked in a London local prison about to have yet another important visitor arrive (there were so many I forget who - maybe a bishop or the bloke that premiered a new choral piece with a prison choir or just TV news team) - anyway the day previous a prison officer had been arrested for supplying drugs to a prisoner - as I left the prison on that evening I noticed a Government poster near the entrance with none other but the very same prison officer pictured doing "good work" - the duty governor was exceedingly grateful that it was pointed out to him. - that would have been about 25 years ago.
Deletehttps://www.bennettinstitute.cam.ac.uk/blog/prison-works/
ReplyDeleteIn 1993, the average prison population was 44,542. A ratchet effect has followed as politicians competed with each other to appear tough on law and order. In May 2023, the total prison population stands at 84,940. Current government policy will see the prison population projected to hit 106,300 by March 2027... it will take a bold politician, willing to consistently follow the evidence and expert advice, to break the iron cage of prisons policy in England and Wales."
Who? And when?
ReplyDelete"When I became Home Secretary, I said that we must reject the view that we are helpless in the face of rising crime. In October, I set out the most comprehensive law and order package ever announced by a Home Secretary. Today, I want to explain how the measures that I propose fit into our overall strategy to fight crime.
I have always said that we need to take action right across the board. It is no good simply concentrating on one area alone. We must do all we can to prevent crime, to catch criminals, to ensure fair justice and to give courts the power they need to pass appropriate sentences.
We will do everything we can to prevent crime, but no society has ever managed to eradicate it. That is why we need to do more to catch and punish criminals.
Prison, of course, is only part of our strategy. I will review the national standards for punishment in the community, which will continue to play an important part in our strategy. It must be effective and rigorous. Courts must always be free to send dangerous, violent and habitual offenders to prison. That is the protection that the public demand, and that is the protection that I am determined to provide. Prison sentences should be a real punishment.
I said at Blackpool that prison works -- and it does. First, it deters many people from crime. If the sanction of prison were not available, who can possibly doubt that many more would be tempted to commit crimes ? Secondly, while they are in prison, criminals cannot commit further crimes against the public.
... my measures are intended to increase the number of criminals caught and the number of criminals convicted. In such circumstances, the courts will want to send some of those criminals to prison. That is why it is necessary to provide additional prison accommodation... we are toughening up punishments to step up the war against crime. That is what the British people want. That is what the Government will provide."
https://howardleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/Intelligent-Justice.pdf
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/so-prison-works-does-it-criminal-career-130-men-released-prison
https://straightstatistics.fullfact.org/article/prison-works-how-well
Here's a retired senior probation officer's view from 1998:
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199798/cmselect/cmhaff/486/486ap20.htm
"In addition to powerful members of the judiciary, Michael Howard was opposed by determined anti-prison organisations, often operating under the guise of the Penal Affairs Consortium, chaired by Paul Cavadino of the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders (NACRO) and powerfully supported by the National Association of Probation Officers (NAPO), the Association of Chief Officers of Probation (ACOP), the Howard League for Penal Reform, the Prison Reform Trust et al. Their anti-prison propaganda campaign over many years succeeded beyond their wildest dreams; their influence on criminal justice policies is largely to blame for the fastest rise in the crime rate ever recorded... Through judges and magistrates appointed to Probation Liaison Committees and ideologically biased post sentence reports, NAPO and ACOP have been in a particularly powerful position to brainwash sentencers...
Michael Howard was the first Home Secretary for decades to give priority to the protection of the general public and punishment for serious and repeat offenders. The evidence is overwhelming that the sentencing discretion of the majority of judges is not to be trusted. Michael Howard's decision to impose mandatory sentences was fully justified
" I am a retired Senior Probation Officer with three years experience in youth work and thirty years experience in the Probation Service working in the community and a two-year period in a prison establishment. Since my retirement I have taken a special interest in sentencing policies and community supervision programmes. I am firmly convinced that persistent offenders, so-called petty or serious ones, unmotivated to reform, should be locked up for increasingly longer prison sentences for the protection of society."
Coad & Fraser were both SPOs who detested the advise, assist & befriend nature of probation and were unashamed in their loathing:
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199798/cmselect/cmhaff/486/48607.htm
"...they did condemn what they saw as the ideological standpoint of NAPO, claiming that "by the 1970s, NAPO had become dominated by Marxist activists" and that "the majority of probation officers are not really aware of the subtle infiltration of this type of ideology, they just go along with what is being said to them in a vociferous way".
Helen Schofield correctly identified the real issues regarding probation in the aftermath of the introduction of the ACR procedures from 1992 - she was herself a very highly regarded probation officer who I happened to follow at a London Office where I heard great praise for her from the clerical officers - those who really knew who did the business properly.
Delete"114. In the view of Ms Helen Schofield of NAPO the cuts meant that frontline services were already facing a crisis; she claimed that: "The crisis is imminent in terms of staffing levels. We are reaching a situation now in some services, and I do not think anybody would be unhappy about my saying this, in which in order to sustain the intensive programme and to maintain National Standards the actual supervision of individuals, particularly after the first three months, is being undertaken by staff who are not probation officers, and in some services by volunteers. In terms of public protection, I feel the supervision of offenders by volunteers, untrained, unpaid, unqualified, unaccountable, is extremely serious".[154]"
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199798/cmselect/cmhaff/486/48607.htm
Link to the Home Affairs Select Committee Third Report from July 1998:
ReplyDeletehttps://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199798/cmselect/cmhaff/486/486ap01.htm
"The MoJ delivers for people often at their lowest point," - romeo, 2025
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgr5g4pv2l0o
A "significant amount" of private data including criminal records has been hacked from the Legal Aid online system, the Ministry of Justice has said.
The MoJ said it became aware of a cyber-attack on the Legal Aid Agency's (LAA) online services on April 23 of data dating back to 2010. It later realised the incident was "more extensive than originally understood".
The ministry urged members of the public who have applied for legal aid in this time period to take steps to safeguard themselves.
"This data may have included contact details and addresses of applicants, their dates of birth, national ID numbers, criminal history, employment status and financial data such as contribution amounts, debts and payments," it said.
Antonia Romeo became the Permanent Secretary of the Home Office in April 2025... Antonia was Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Justice for 4 years, with responsibility for criminal justice, prison and probation services, courts, legal services, and constitutional policy.... Antonia holds an MA (PPE) from Oxford University, an MSc (Economics) from the London School of Economics, and an Advanced Management Programme diploma from Columbia Business School.
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/legal-aid-agency-data-breach
Deletehttps://news.sky.com/story/cyber-attack-on-legal-aid-agency-exposed-significant-data-including-criminal-records-13370828
"An MoJ source put the breach down to the "neglect and mismanagement" of the previous government, saying vulnerabilities in the Legal Aid Agency systems have been known for many years... The data accessed affected those who applied for legal aid in the last 15 years, and may include contact details and addresses of legal aid applicants, their dates of birth, national insurance numbers, criminal history, employment status and financial data... The organisation's digital services, which are used by legal aid providers to log their work and get paid, have been taken offline."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgr5g4pv2l0o
Why are some in the media saying DV victims are particularly exposed?
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2024/715/pdfs/uksiem_20240715_en_001.pdf
"Why was this approach taken to change the law?
6.4 This Order is necessary to amend primary legislation (LASPO) to effect the necessary changes ensuring that civil legal aid is available for advocacy for police-led DAPO proceedings in the magistrates’ courts and on appeal in the Crown Court"
DAPO = Domestic Abuse Protection Order
DAPN = Domestic Abuse Protection Notices
LASPO = Legal Aid, Sentencing, and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012
"Picking it & chewing it, everybody's doing it"
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c7v7n81emy3o
France will build a new high-security prison in its overseas department of French Guiana to house drug traffickers and radical Islamists, the country's justice minister announced during a visit to the territory.
The €400m (£337m) facility, which could open as early as 2028, will be built in an isolated location deep in the Amazon jungle in the northwestern region of Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni.
The plan was announced after a series of violent incidents linked to criminal gangs which saw prisons and staff targeted across France in recent months.
The prison will hold up to 500 people, with a separate wing designed to house the most dangerous criminals.
Guantanamo, Alcatraz, Rikers, Robben Island, Isle of Wight...
Well now France are building a prison in the Amazon, how long until the UK start sending prisoners to the Falklands?
ReplyDeleteIt’ll be Mahmood and Timpsons next big announcement.
Starmer can get tips from his special friend Trump on how to build the perimeter wall around the territory.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c7v7n81emy3o
Shabana Mahmood was Shadow secretary of State for Justice from September 2023 - if she had been paying attention she could have known precisely the state of the English and Welsh Prisons by the time she was appointed Lord Chancellor in July 2024 - even ordinary members of parliament should have had a good idea - I suspect the truth is they were only bothered to the extent it was a campaigning issue - thus as probation is completely misunderstood in the main stream media - it is unlikely she knew very much about that either as she was just not bothered.
ReplyDeletegauke's awks report is due this thursday... leaks suggest a combination of investment in tech & probation are the key messages... mike nellis on R4 PM this evening said he thought tech could be helpful but probation was where the investment should be focused, to bring staff numbers up to scratch & retain existing officers; in effect, allowing them to develop the experience that used to exist but has been lost.
ReplyDeleteHe should have said lost through grayling's scandalous failure of a TR vanity project, but he didn't go that far.
PM reported that an estimated 40,000 people will be tagged in various formats... no timescale, no named providers but current participants in the tagging of people include Capita, G4S, Serco, Airbus, Telefonica and Buddi.
Keep the tech.
DeleteInstead recruit, pay and train staff better.
And get probation out of the grips of the prisons, police and the civil service.
From Independent:
ReplyDeleteRape victim forced to live just minutes from abuser after probation failings
"A rape victim has been forced to live just minutes from her attacker – despite assurances from the government that a plan would be put in place before his release to prevent them coming into contact.
Christopher Lawson, who was jailed for 16 years in 2017 for the rape and indecent assault of a girl from the age of eight, was released on parole last week after serving half his sentence.
As part of the terms of his release, he has been made the subject of an exclusion zone, which prohibits him from going to a particular place or area.
But the zone is just several streets wide, with a number of key amenities that are close to both the victim’s and the perpetrator’s homes not included.
Ahead of his release, local MP Kate Osborne requested an urgent review on behalf of the victim, citing concerns that it would be “almost impossible for the [victim and the perpetrator] not to come into contact”.
“I also wish for this matter to be brought to the personal attention of the secretary of state, as I believe there is significant public interest in this case”, Ms Osborne wrote in a letter to prisons minister James Timpson.
In his response, seen by The Independent, Lord Timpson vowed that Lawson would “only be released once the Probation Service have put in place a plan to manage him safely”.
He said officials in the Ministry of Justice were “working with the Probation Service to ensure that both the exclusion zone and planned release address for Lawson are able to function in a safe way”, promising that the victim would be kept “updated regarding the exclusion zone licence condition”.
But Lawson was released before any changes to the exclusion zone were made.
The exclusion zone has since been marginally expanded to include a few more streets, but Ms Osborne argues it is still “nowhere near wide enough” as the victim and her attacker will still be forced to exist in close proximity.
The woman said there had been numerous failings throughout the process of Lawson’s release. She was initially told he would not be fitted with a location tag, meaning she spent days afraid to leave the house, only to be later told that he was in fact tagged.
She was also wrongly told by her victim liaison officer that if she were to request a review of the exclusion zone, she could face legal action from Lawson and have it removed entirely. But Ms Osborne has since received assurances from the justice department that this is not the case.
It is understood that the Probation Service had not received a formal application for an exclusion zone extension by Lawson’s release date.
A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: “Victims must feel safe, which is why offenders released on licence are subject to strict conditions such as curfews and exclusion zones that prevent them approaching their victims.
“Victims who qualify for the Probation Service’s statutory Victim Contact Scheme have the right to make representations about licence conditions that relate to them.”
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/21/more-community-sentences-in-england-and-wales-could-be-catastrophic-warns-watchdog
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/22/shabana-mahmood-considers-chemical-castration-for-serious-sex-offenders