The
vacation meant that I finally had time to catch up on the Prison Reform Trust’s
admirable Bromley
Briefings Prison Factfile for Autumn
2017. I have always thought that any alien landing on our planet would regard as
insane our use of incarceration to deal with most malefactors, especially in prisons
like those in Britain which expose inmates to terror, danger, toxic levels of boredom, and
being deprived of supportive relationships and opportunities for
self-improvement.
As
a society we excel at producing criminals, the usual culprits being poverty, lack
of education, and our orphanages: 31% of women and 24% of men in prison were
brought up in ‘care’. But we are catastrophically bad at helping them become
more constructive citizens.
The
Factfile shows how things continue to
deteriorate. 49% of adults reoffend within a year. The summer saw a surge in the prison
population to more than 86,000. Only 1 in 20 people in prison are on even the
basic level of the incentives and earned privileges (IEP) scheme. The number of
frontline operational staff employed in the public prison estate has fallen by 23%
in seven years. Members of ethnic minorities are 81% more likely to be sent to prison
for an indictable offence at the Crown Court. Etc. etc.
Then
there is the gender issue. A staggering 83% of women entering prison under sentence have
committed a non-violent offence. In my idea of a sane society, hardly any of
them should be in prison in the first place, rather than a rehabilitation
system, or community service.
There
is only one circumstance, in my view, where confinement in prison needs to be
obligatory, and that is where a proven perpetrator, if at liberty, presents a
real and present physical danger to other people. Despite my radical scepticism
about the efficacy of imprisonment, I am finding it very hard to feel confident
that John Worboys, convicted in
2009 of multiple vicious, cynical, premeditated sexual assaults on women in his
black cab, is no longer capable of sexually motivated violence, whatever the Parole
Board has decided.
The
issue here is the notorious IPP
(Imprisonment for Public Protection) sentence, inaugurated in 2005, and
designed for offenders who posed a serious threat to the public but whose
crimes could not be given a life sentence. Far too many IPPs were imposed, and
the system was discontinued. But the Parole Board is now desperate to release
IPP inmates, having been left with a backlog of over 10,000 prisoners (14% of
the prison population) who do not know whether, or even if, they will be
released.
I
am certain that many of those 10,000 IPP inmates have no place behind bars.
But, surely, John Worboys and others convicted of repeated incidents of sexual violence should
not be at the front of the ‘exit’ queue.
There is just one cause for optimism in this dismal case: it has got people talking, which rarely happens, about the actual purpose of our hopelessly anachronistic, brutal and creaking prison system.
There is just one cause for optimism in this dismal case: it has got people talking, which rarely happens, about the actual purpose of our hopelessly anachronistic, brutal and creaking prison system.
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