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February 17, 2006: Carlile Inquiry Reports Lord Carlile’s Inquiry into the treatment of children in penal custody recommends severely restricting physical intervention, stopping the strip searching of children and an end to prison segregation. Carlile's report on his year long independent Inquiry into the use of physical restraints, strip searching and segregation of children in penal custody is published today. The report says that the Children’s Minister should assume overall responsibility for children in custody and that more effort should be made to resolve conflict and reduce violence inside institutions. The full report can be purchased via the Howard League for Penal Reform website. The 107 page report has 45 recommendations, including:
Lord Carlile said today:
Evidence supplied to the Inquiry by the Youth Justice Board showed that physical restraint was used 5,133 times on children in prisons between January 2004 and September 2005; in secure training centres it was used 7,020 times on children; and 8 local authority units used restraint 3,359 times. The Inquiry found considerable variation in the definition of restraint and the techniques used. The Inquiry was given evidence that injuries to both children and staff were not uncommon but that the anger and resentment generated was counter-productive. It was of particular concern that the Inquiry could elicit no information about the use of restraint against black and minority ethnic children in any of the institutions and no evidence was provided that it was being monitored. Lord Carlile was provided with no convincing evidence that stripping children during searches helped with security. The Inquiry was told by children that they had been stripped naked in contravention of institutional policies. The Inquiry found significant variation in practice in the use of separating children that ranged from holding children for weeks in a bare stone cell to telling them to go to their own room for a few minutes. The Inquiry found that “time out” could be a useful technique for diffusing tension and recommended that it should be for no more than a few minutes, should be consistently applied and monitored, and that prisons should no longer use segregation cells for holding children.
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November 28, 2008: Call To End Orange Clothes For Community Payback November 25, 2008: Legislation Protects Victims Of Forced Marriage November 24, 2008: Tasers For Police November 11, 2008: Independent Review Alleges Prison Service Incompetence October 17, 2008: Sanctions For Reckless Traders, Says Napo October 15, 2008: Jobs Axed in Probation, Prisons, And Courts October 3, 2008: IPCC On Double Fatal Shooting October 2, 2008: Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair Resigns October 1, 2008: New Met Police e-crime Unit September 25, 2008: ID Cards Update September 22, 2008: New Prostitution Rules Supporting Trafficked Women September 19, 2008: Mandatory Polygraph Tests for Sex Offenders September 12, 2008: Prison Transfer With Vietnam Agreed September 4, 2008: Reoffending Rates: New Figures September 1, 2008: Tougher Community Work For Offenders August 26, 2008. Summary Justice Widening Criminal Justice Net August 21, 2008: Tightening Controls For Sex Offenders July 15, 2008: Explaining The Rise In Prison Numbers
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