Источник Daily Mail.co.uk, London, United Kingdom
Заголовок How prisoners are able to roam around unmonitored amid a massive backlog of fitting electronic tags to inmates
Дата 20240920

Этим цветом    обозначаются известные системе слова и выражения, принимавшие участие в анализе данного текста, а таким    - идентифицированные, то есть соотнесенные с каким-либо объектом онтологической базы

============= Обработанный текст:
How prisoners are able to roam around unmonitored amid a massive backlog of
fitting electronic tags to inmates

How prisoners are able to roam around unmonitored amid a massive backlog of
fitting electronic tags to inmates

By David Barrett and David Shipley

Published: 00:27 BST, 20 September 2024 | Updated: 01:29 BST, 20 September
2024

e-mail• Коммуникации » Интернет-коммуникации » Электронная почта

1

View

comments

Prisoners are being released from jail without being electronically tagged
amid a massive backlog.

The Ministry of Justice confirmed there were 'delays' with fitting the
devices, which are meant to allow certain criminals' movements to be tracked
on release.

Probation officers said the situation was partly due to a shortage of tags and
warned it could pose a danger to the public.

Offenders left untagged include some of those freed under the Government's
early-release scheme, it is understood.

Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood promised that tagging would provide crucial
oversight of convicts released under her emergency measures.

Prisoners are being released from jail without being electronically tagged
amid a massive backlog (stock)

Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood (pictured) promised that tagging would
provide crucial oversight of convicts released under her emergency measures -
pictured here in her constituency office in Birmingham

Offenders left untagged include some of those freed under the Government's
early-release scheme, it is understood (stock)

Thousands of offenders are understood to have been already freed under the
scheme, which launched on Tuesday last week amid scenes of criminals partying
in the street.

Current delays in the tagging programme pre-date the early-release scheme,
however.

The Mail understands that prisoners freed in the summer – and who were
expecting to be tagged – have still not received a visit from MoJ contractors
Serco. The company took over the £200 million, six-year electronic monitoring
services (EMS) contract in May.

One former prisoner said: 'I've been out for almost three weeks and they
haven't tagged me.

'When I call the tag company they say there's a backlog, they aren't
prioritising anyone and they'll get to me when they can.'

People spray a man with sparkling wine after he walked out of HMP Nottingham
earlier this month

Another said: 'My probation officer didn't even know I hadn't been tagged.'

A senior probation officer told the Mail: 'EMS can't keep on top of requests
for tagging or information.' Another senior officer told the BBC• Объект организация » Организации по алфавиту » Организации на Бр » BBC (Би-би-си)

• Средства массовой информации » Средства массовой информации Великобритании » BBC (Би-би-си)
it was down
to a shortage of tags, adding that the failure to enforce licence conditions
on offenders could 'potentially be dangerous'.

Read More

Prison population drops by 2,188 in a week after Keir Starmer's early
release scheme

Electronic tagging is used as part of the 'home detention curfew' scheme which
allows inmates serving less than four years to spend the last six months of
their sentence at home on a tag.

It is also available for other types of offenders, including those freed under
Ms Mahmood's new scheme, which sees most inmates released after serving 40 per
cent of their sentence.

Last week, the Mail revealed that one criminal committed an alleged sexual
assault• Дела судебные » Дела уголовные » Сексуальное насилие
within an hour of being released under the scheme and went on the run
before being arrested.

MoJ sources said Ms Mahmood was 'furious' at the delays in fitting tags. An
MoJ spokesman said: 'We are holding Serco to account to address delays in
fitting some offenders with tags, and will apply financial penalties against
the company if this is not resolved quickly.

'While this issue is ongoing, we have prioritised tagging domestic abuse
offenders to make sure their licence conditions, such as staying away from
their victims, are strictly followed.'

A Serco spokesman said: 'We have been working hard to reduce the number of
people waiting to have a tag fitted. We work closely with the MoJ and the
Probation Service to fit tags swiftly and prioritise cases based on risk• Страхование » Риск
profiles.'

Our justice system is at breaking point - and it's nothing less than a public
safety
emergency

By David Shipley for the Daily Mail

In prisons across the land it's an open secret. 'They aren't tagging anyone,'
prisoners whisper to one another.

Although that might be an exaggeration, it's not far from the truth.

When I was released from prison in August 2021, having served a sentence for
fraud, my electronic tracking tag was fitted on the very evening I left,
meaning probation services would know immediately if I broke my curfew.

Three years on, it appears the system is utterly broken and another key part
of the government's public protection strategy has failed.

When prisoner release functions correctly, those let out of jail must be
'tagged' as part of the Home Detention Curfew (HDC) scheme which requires them
to stay at home, typically from 7pm to 7am.

The curfew system is operated by Electronic Monitoring Services (EMS), a
company managed by the giant subcontracter Serco on behalf of the Ministry of
Justice
. This curfew can last for up to six months, and is considered an
efficient way of managing lower-risk• Страхование » Риск offenders in the community.

On the evening after a prisoner's release, EMS visit their home, fit the tag,
and set up the monitoring equipment. From then on, if they aren't at home
during curfew hours, an alarm will trigger on the device and the Probation
Service should be informed.

But, as the Mail reveals today, offenders are remaining untagged for weeks
after leaving prison - often with their probation officers totally unaware
that this is the case. In fact, I understand that officers were only informed
about untagged criminals yesterday. Shabana Mahmood, the Justice Secretary, is
said to be furious and is demanding answers from Serco.

Prisoners were released early from prison across the UK in a move by the
government as the system is unable to cope with the overcrowding (stock)

It's not good enough. Probation staff have a punishing job at the best of
times. They supervise around 240,000 offenders, who have either been released
from prison or who are serving a suspended sentence or community order.

Thanks to the new government's early prisoner release scheme, these numbers
will only rise as most prisoners will now serve 60 per cent of their sentence
in the community.

I know from personal experience that beleaguered probation staff are
hard-working and often passionate about their duty to stop reoffending.

But the fact is that the organisation is desperately understaffed. It only has
about 70 per cent of the qualified officers it needs. Even if the government
achieves its promise to hire 1,000 new trainees by March 2025, there will
still be a significant shortfall.

In this context, discovering that EMS and Serco are not only failing to tag
offenders, but also not informing probation staff, is terrifying.

And Serco's assurance• Страхование that: 'Where an individual is not at home…we prioritise
making another visit so that people are tagged as soon as possible,' is hardly
going to reassure the public.

While the government insists that it is prioritising tagging domestic abusers,
there are many released prisoners such as drug dealers and other violent
criminals whose reoffending might well cause a risk• Страхование » Риск to the public. Much crime
of this kind, of course, is linked to nighttime behaviour and probation
officers simply can't hope to do their job properly if they don't have proper
information about the whereabouts of those they're supervising.

I fear that we no longer have a functioning justice system, just the pretence
of one.

Many life-ruining crimes aren't even considered worthy of arrest or
prosecution. Now, we are releasing the few prisoners who do feel the force of
the law in a botched, unsupervised manner, leaving them free to reoffend
again. Meanwhile, the arms of the state don't even communicate with one
another.

Our justice system is at breaking point - and it's nothing less than a public
safety
emergency.

David Shipley is a former prisoner who writes, speaks and researches on prison
and justice issues.

BBC• Объект организация » Организации по алфавиту » Организации на Бр » BBC (Би-би-си)

• Средства массовой информации » Средства массовой информации Великобритании » BBC (Би-би-си)

============= Итог: 1,7500 ; Страхование#Риск 1,3125 ; Средства массовой информации #Средства массовой информации Великобритании#BBC (Би-би-си) 1,3125 ; Коммуникации#Интернет-коммуникации#Электронная почта 1,3125 ; Дела судебные#Дела уголовные#Сексуальное насилие

============= Объекты: организации BBC (Би-би-си) Средства массовой информации Великобритании


Copyright © 2007-2024 ООО «RelTeam»