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October 9, 2006: Fourfold Increase In Recalls To Prison
The Home Secretary’s prison crisis could be alleviated if he
returned professional judgement to probation staff when dealing with parole
decisions, according to probation union Napo.
At least 380 prisoners per month are returned to jail for technical violations
of their orders.
Between 2000 and 2005 there was a fourfold increase in the number of individuals
released from prison and subsequently recalled for breaching their parole
conditions. At the same time the work of the
Parole Board has increased by over
100%. Statistics gathered by the Home
Office show that two-thirds of the persons recalled to custody were not
recalled for re-offending but for technical breaches. In 2000/1, 2,457 prisoners
were recalled. This had risen sharply to 9,320 by 2004/5. During the same
period, the number of long-term prisoners recalled rose from 267 to 712.
Evidence collected by Napo from prisoners and from union members shows that many
of the recalls were for technical reasons such as not following rules, or
missing appointments. In the majority of the cases of those recalled for
technical reasons there was no evidence of risk to the public. Cases published
by Napo include individuals who were recalled for not getting up in the morning,
for reporting to the wrong probation office, for losing their permanent address,
for being late for appointments, for going absent without leave following a
bereavement, because of tags not working, for being arrested but later not
charged, for being out after curfew times and for a failure to keep
appointments.
Offenders released on licence are subject to 6 standard conditions including:
- not to commit an offence
- to report to the Probation Service
- to reside at an approved address
- not to travel outside the UK without permission.
Additional conditions may be added according to individual
circumstances, such as addressing drug dependency, psychiatric treatment and not
to associate with people of a specified age.
Harry Fletcher, Assistant General Secretary of Napo said:
“Six years ago the Home Office removed the discretion from
probation officers to decide whether a breach warranted a recall to custody.
As a consequence the number of recalls has spiralled out of control.
Commonsense decrees that professional discretion is returned to staff. The
return of discretion could free up to a thousand prison places. A reduction in
recalls by half would equate to the monthly increase in the prison population
and go a long way to solving the Government’s prison overcrowding problem.”
The current prison population stands at record levels. In
contrast in 2000 it stood at 65,164. The prison population rose, between 2000
and 2004 by 14%. The increase in the number of persons recalled was nearly 300%.
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