Monday, 22 February 2010

"We've tried nothing and we're fresh out of ideas!"

Teenage offenders given community punishments such as building bird boxes went on to commit more than 660,000 further crimes, it emerged last night.
You mean, soft punishments don't work? Well, who could have forseen that!
Parliamentary answers have revealed for the first time the number of new offences by juveniles who received 'soft' punishments instead of custody for crimes including mugging, theft and vandalism.

Between 2002 and 2007, they were convicted of 667,073 new crimes, according to analysis by the Tories.
Still, there's a silver lining:
The number of young offenders involved was 298,609, so the 667,000 crimes were an average of 2.2 each - though not all of them will have re-offended.
Ah. Right. And some of them will have re-offended many, many times…

And it might be even worse than it looks:
This figure relates only to crimes committed within 12 months of the court order being made, meaning many could have been prevented if the offender had been taken into custody instead.
Yes, but that would only happen is we had a justice system keen on crime prevention, wouldn't it?

Instead, we have a lot of government departments and quangos - MAPPA, probation services, etc - with a vested interest in not seeing their jobs disappear, like all those unimportant private sector jobs...
Conservative justice spokesman Dominic Grieve, who obtained the figures, said: 'Ministers need to get a grip of the youth justice system and reduce re-offending rates, which remain stubbornly high.

'We can't go on with a youth justice policy which is failing offenders and creating new victims.'
Note there was nothing there on what the Tories plan to do about it, though.
The re-offending figures emerged on the day the Government officially launched its 'Making Good' scheme, which gives local people the chance to suggest work for young offenders.
Whoops!

3 comments:

  1. "Note there was nothing there on what the Tories plan to do about it, though."

    Well spotted! I think we can assume that nothing will change: the no education mafia and the crime and (no) punishment mafia will prevail no matter who's in power. Since the Conservatives have set up a "social" justice commission (as if the adjunct "social" gives some extra authority to an exercise in applied wetness) we can expect another slew of "social" initiatives from Cameron when he reaches no. 10: and the Onservatives wonder why they can't retain a dominant lead in the polls!

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  2. How the fuck do you 'fail an offender'?

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  3. "I think we can assume that nothing will change..."

    I expect some areas tto get worse - particularly multiculti policy and 'green' initiatives.

    "How the fuck do you 'fail an offender'?"

    I think you fail him or her by not punishing them to the full extent of the law.

    But I doubt that's the meaning implied in the article...

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