The previous post deals with the folly of the Tory policy of mandatory prison sentences for the second offence of carnying a knife. On a broader front my friend Michael Meadowcroft has written to the Yorkshire Post outlining wider criticisms of right wing "get tough" policies.
TO:
THE EDITOR, THE YORKSHIRE POST
10th
May 2014
Dear Sir
Grant Woodward’s article (Get-tough over sentences won’t stop
scepticism, May 8) is yet another repetition of the standard fallacies
associated with crime and deterrence.
No-one doubts that there are heinous crimes that require severe
punishment but this really should not be confused with effective combating of
future crime nor of prevention of re-offending. The victims of violent crime
and their families are, of course, entitled to see the perpetrators punished
but it is the responsibility of the justice system, and of politicians,
sensitively to explain to them the reality of what works and what does not
work.
First, it is the likelihood of getting caught that is a deterrent not
the severity of the sentence. Take burglary- which I am familiar with, having
suffered fifteen of them - if we only convict 13% of the burglars, the odds of
15 to 2 are excellent and they will carry on, whatever the penalty. But if we
caught 80% it would not be worthwhile, even with minimal penalties. The proof
of this lies with motor offences. Why are all driving more slowly? Because
penalties for speeding have soared? Not at all - it is simply because the
advent of the dreaded speed cameras have vastly increased the likelihood of
being caught.
Second, it is simply not the case that all murderers are dangerous. Many
commit the crime in domestic circumstances that are highly unlikely ever to
recur. A murder case I was personally closely involved with some years ago was
one such. The otherwise respectable young man from a stable and loving family
committed an appalling murder - a crime of passion - and was duly convicted. It
was accepted by the prosecution and by the justice system that he was in no way
dangerous but the mandatory life sentence meant that over ten years of his life
was wasted in prison. It is also salutary to realise juries will not convict
someone who has committed the manifest
“mercy killing” of a terminally ill relative if they believe that they would go
to prison.
Third, prison is not an effective means of preventing re-offending for
the vast majority of cases. The prisons are now so overcrowded that the prison
service is unable to do the rehabilitation work it very much wants to do. There
are still a few specialist units that achieve significant results, at a high
cost, but these are increasingly rare. So we lock more men and women up at an
immense cost and wait for them to come out and re-offend! We need many more
probation officers, within the public service, in order to reduce their
caseloads and to achieve the changes in behaviour that we all want.
So, please Mr Woodward, if you genuinely wish to reduce crime, look at
the facts rather than the slogans and be brave enough to campaign for what
works.
Yours faithfully
Michael Meadowcroft
The article to which Michael responded can be found at:
http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/debate/columnists/grant-woodward-getting-tough-over-sentences-won-t-stop-scepticism-1-6604019
The article to which Michael responded can be found at:
http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/debate/columnists/grant-woodward-getting-tough-over-sentences-won-t-stop-scepticism-1-6604019
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