28. Jun. 2010. – 08:45:30
I retired from the magistracy in 2015 after 17 years mainly as a presiding justice
- A MAGISTRATE`S DIARIES
- United Kingdom
- My current blog can be accessed at https://thejusticeofthepeaceblog.blogspot.com/
ARE MET POLICE GOING BACK TO THE FUTURE?
ALCOHOL SALES TO UNDER AGE DRINKERS
24. Jun. 2010. – 12:24:05
One would assume that local councils` enforcement teams would do their utmost to stem the purchase by under 18s of alcohol. After all the same councils have to cope with the results of the drunken behaviour of their tax payers` children. When charges are laid against those who sell drink to juveniles the accused appear at Magistrates` Courts. If they are convicted by pleading guilty or being found guilty after trial they are usually fined. One would expect thousands of such cases to have been prosecuted and millions of pounds of fines to have been levied. After all excessive and early drinking is a major medical problem as well as a problem for the criminal justice system. But one could be mistaken.
A parliamentary answer by James Brokenshire (Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Home Office; Old Bexley and Sidcup, Conservative) on June 17th revealed amongst other facts that in 2008 in the criminal justice areas of Bedfordshire, Devon & Cornwall, Humberside and Warwickshire there was not one instance of a fine being imposed for this offence. In the whole of England & Wales in only 326 cases were fines imposed. These fines ranged in average from £152 to £1,050. These figures are shocking beyond belief but my own experience bears them out. It is well over a year.....perhaps two since I sat on such a case and my sitting rate is higher than the average JP`s.
Every case prosecuted by councils is paid for by Council Tax and topped up by grants from central government as is all local expenditure. Even the mathematically illiterate can appreciate the term "cost effectiveness" even if its underlying premises are numerical gobblygook. Spend eg £1 to stop a drunken youth causing eg £20 of damage to him/hersef, others and the environment must make sense economically, medically and socially. Oh were it so simple!
FOREIGN PRISONS & FOREIGN PRISONERS
23. Jun. 2010. – 14:54:09
There seems to me a similarity in treatment for matters within or without the European Union. Doctors from within do not have to show proficiency in English to practise here. That loophole has cost the life of at least one man overdosed by a medic from Germany. The European arrest warrant is another seemingly iniquitous result of E.U. "harmonisation".
MAGISTRATES` ASSOCIATION NEEDS TO BE PRO-ACTIVE
22. Jun. 2010. – 16:18:05
Presumably the Magistrates` Association had or should have had prior knowledge of such news/events. Immediate rebuttal if appropriate or reasoned comment should be forthcoming ASAP. If magistrates do not make their own case accurately and promptly in scenarios such as described who will make their case? Currently each member pays £33.50 subs. I would urge the Association to convene an extraordinary general meeting with one topic on the agenda..........subscription increase immediately to £40 the additional income to employ a professional journalist or PR consultant whose job would be to tell government and people why magistrates are important to the criminal justice system.........in other words to justify our existence preferably in our current form. There are too many who would not be sorry to say goodbye to us.
The following has just been published on the Association`s website:
There are unsubstantiated rumours at the moment about magistrates' courts closures - see today's Daily Telegraph. John Thornhill, the Association's chairman has a meeting with the Minister for Justice, Jonathan Djanogly tomorrow morning (23 June). In the meantime the following quote has been issued to the Press Association and BBC:
Responding to various rumours about court closures John Thornhill, chairman of the Magistrates’ Association said, “With the current financial crisis it is not surprising that the Ministry of Justice is looking to reduce costs by closing courts. In some cases this can be justified because buildings are no longer fit for purpose or are not being used sufficiently. However the principles of community justice delivered by ordinary citizens for local people must, and can be, preserved. “
MAGISTRATES NEED LAWYERS` SUPPORT TO RETAIN FUNCTION
21. Jun. 2010. – 12:27:00
CROWN COURT SITTINGS
. Jun. 2010. – 13:19:47
It had been a while since I had sat on an appeal at Crown Court. Outside the legal profession very few people are aware that appeals against verdict and/or sentence at a Magistrates` Court are heard in front of a judge assisted by two justices.
I had been telephoned by a court official the day previously, apologies were given for the short notice but owing to a colleague having had an accident I was asked if I could fill in at 12.00 noon the following day. And so arriving at the impressive red brick building I pressed the button at the gated judges` car park entrance and a uniformed security officer directed me to a space.
My J.P. colleague from another bench was already in the retiring room familiarising herself with the details of the forthcoming case. Shortly after we had made our introductions a court usher advised us that the judge in the appeal would join us in a few minutes. And so I followed my colleague and his Honour into court.
The courts in my home bench are not cramped but court number eight was twice the size and without a jury on its two benches and with nobody in the public gallery the feeling of spaciousness was magnified. Wigged counsels` deference to our judge was certainly more than is usually accorded a bench of JPs by those appearing in front of us. During lunch which itself was a treat compared with my usual fare, a homemade sandwich, I mentioned some of the more crass remarks which have been directed to benches on which I have been chairman. The more outrageous in his Honour`s opinion warranted a complaint to the bar council. The six other judges present were extremely welcoming and a very relaxing exchange of legal banter and opinion was an added bonus.
The case itself concerned an assault by a young man on two members of a neighbouring family with which his family had been at loggerheads for some years. He had previously, we discovered later, been tried in his absence. The three parties were the only witnesses and bad character applications and admissions revealed all had been previously convicted of offences ranging from theft to G.B.H. On retiring to consider our verdict we were all of the opinion that we could not possibly be sure of what happened on the day and the appeal against conviction was upheld. Unlike our procedure at court when we leave a written record of our conclusions and reasons on the court file his Honour did not input his reasons to his laptop as he had done taking his notes of evidence but the Crown Court being a court of record had his words recorded on tape. So justice was done although nobody was there to see it done.
Having been reminded just how stimulating sitting on an appeal can be I have made a note to offer myself for some more sittings in the coming half year.
DRINK/DRIVING LIMIT LOWERED TO 10mg ALCOHOL/100ml BLOOD:A BRIEF ARGUMENT IN FAVOUR
17. Jun. 2010. – 11:54:24
The current level tempts drinkers to judge their “allowed” alcohol intake which of course has variable effects on individuals depending on eg health, weight, sex, metabolic rate etc etc. Reduction to 50mg/100ml will not remove that temptation to have literally “one and only one for the road”. And that one could take him/her over the limit.
If the permitted limit were only 10mg/100ml the message and science would be as clear as crystal; one glass of wine or half a pint is too much and the result is arrest and disqualification. But, and it is a BIG but, having a level which is not zero would allow for any residual alcohol from the night before to have been eliminated except in the most serious cases, usually alcoholics, and those who had a genuine belief they were legal to drive would usually escape penalty unlike the circumstances of a zero level.
Whether the level will be reduced and by how much is a matter for the Coalition. North believes a zero level would be unacceptable to public opinion. The banning of smoking in planes, trains, pubs and restaurants was also thought unacceptable notwithstanding some of the extreme opinions regarding company vehicles and individuals` own homes. There will always be road casualties. Those where alcohol plays a part are inexcusable. Change when and if it comes should be sooner rather than later.
BREACH COURTS LEAD TO JAIL FOR SOME
16. Jun. 2010. – 15:31:04
About a month ago a friend who lives a couple of hundred miles away and whose twenty something daughter was known to the courts in her town asked for any advice he could pass on to her regarding her impending appearance at their local Magistrates` Court on breaching conditions imposed by the court for her to undertake unpaid work in the community. I told him only that she should be honest before the bench.
Last winter an addict aged around thirty was before us for a regular monthly review of his case. He had been attending a drug rehabilitation centre where he was drug tested twice weekly for two months. Each visit had indicated that he was positive for heroin but the officer present indicated that the mere fact that he had not missed a testing session was a step forward even although he was still using. All we could sensibly do was to make our suggestion to him that the next step if he really wanted to get clean was to have at least one negative next month when we told him to return. So success albeit at a low level is for an addict just to turn up regularly to the testing centre. This is the real state of the drug problem. His history was not unusual........many convictions mainly for theft and varying sentences including custody. Later that day another drug user appeared because he had failed to keep an appointment with probation officers. He was so spaced out the duty solicitor asked for the case to be adjourned because his client was incapable of answering to his name. We did not therefore enquire how he remembered to come or travel to court. The final case that afternoon was of a twenty three year old woman under a curfew with a tag who was not at her designated address when she should have been when Serco telephoned her. They had arrived later, so we were told, to find her in a drunken sleep in her garden some yards from her front door having apparently lost her key. As a result her curfew was increased in length by a considerable amount.
Many such cases result in immediate imprisonment especially for those with history of repeatedly disregarding court orders. It is only after considerable discussion and often with great reluctance that magistrates impose a custodial sentence. Those who would abolish short [usually under six months] sentences should visit a court a few times and realise that for some offenders locking them up to protect society is the only sensible outcome.
SHORT SENTENCES ARE NOT TO BE DISPOSED OF
14. Jun. 2010. – 16:05:31
JUSTICE SEEN TO BE DONE BY "TIME SERVED"
11. Jun. 2010. – 11:13:10
begin.
His "previous" showed that he had within the last six months been cautioned once and imprisoned once for assaulting his partner. His sect. IV offence was committed in the street where his bail conditions for the second assault had prohibited his being. He had been remanded two days before pleading guilty and being imprisoned for that assault. His lawyer in mitigation asked us to remember he was drunk at the time and distraught about not being able to return to his partner. We reminded him that being drunk is an aggravating feature not mitigation....many lawyers pull this one as if we don`t know how to treat that factor common in many offenders. He also suggested we deal with the matter on the spot by considering how long Jacob had been on remand ie "time served". Our job of sentencing was made more difficult by not knowing how many days he had actually served for the assault before being released early from prison. Part of his period inside would have included sentence for assault and remand time on the sect. IV. Fortunately enquiries to the prison cleared that gap in our knowledge. We retired to consider his sentence.
"Time served" allows a defendant who has been held in custody on remand who would otherwise have been fined or given a custodial sentence to have the time spent in prison considered as sufficient to have paid his dues to society and to be released immediately or to be reduced accordingly. This matter was far too serious for a fine to be considered. Sentencing Guidelines indicated a minimum of 200 hours community payback [unpaid work] or a few weeks jail if the offence were so serious. He was borderline. On the basis of a structured decision we were considering the exact number of hours when we re-visited the reality of the sentence; he had already spent more time on remand than would have been the case if he had been jailed for the offence. It would be unjust therefore in effect to punish him twice. We could not allow "time served" on a community penalty so we sentenced him to ten days custody meaning that he would be released as soon as the prison had done its paperwork.
This was a pragmatic approach brought about by the seemingly illogical gap in "time served" regulations. There are those who would prefer magistrates to follow very strict sentencing guidelines and deviate at their peril. We announced in open court our reasons for a custodial sentence and the consequences. We considered that on that morning as on other mornings justice was done and seen to be done.
STUDENT LAW BREAKERS AND VERY SEVERE CONSEQUENCES
10. Jun. 2010. – 13:29:27
STAFFORDSHIRE CRIME STATISTICS GOING UP AND DOWN
08. Jun. 2010. – 16:00:45
It was therefore salutary to read in "This is Staffordshire" of the falling crime rate. After all amongst other things that`s what the council tax payers of the county are paying for and surely Staffordshire Constabulary`s P.R. department will tell it how it is....or will it? Burton on Trent lies in the aforesaid county of Staffordshire. According to its local newspaper "The Burton News and Staffordshire" crime is rising in that fair town. I am not here to contradict these reports. But if anybody reading this blog lives in the town and reads both these newspapers are you happy or dissatisfied with the performance of your local police force?
JEKYLL AND HYDE PROSECUTIONS
07. Jun. 2010. – 10:41:51
When Robert Louis Stevenson
published "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" in 1886 little
did he realise that the name[s] of the central character would become synonymous
with behaviour that can only be described as schizophrenic either literally or
metaphorically.
And a Jekyll and Hyde
performance was the only way to describe the local council`s prosecuting
performance a couple of months ago when various cases were before us. The
afternoon began with two matters of estate agents having erected boards and in
the first instance also an advertising hording apparently without the correct
authority. The prosecutor told us the facts and the first agent pleaded guilty but
after listening carefully to his mitigation which involved many years` history
and pages of documents [he was unrepresented] and revolved around
"grandfather rights" we concluded it was an equivocal plea and
ordered a trial. This provoked concerned looks all round and in order to ensure
justice was seen to be done we stayed our decision and put the matter back so
that the parties could have further discussions. Eventually on the parties`
return and the defendant`s final plea of guilty we fined his firm £500 plus a
similar sum for costs. The prosecutor had had a clearly documented file and the
defendant had only himself to blame for being in contravention of the planning
laws.
The very next case of a broadly
similar nature with another guilty plea from an unrepresented defendant whose
mitigation prompted so many questions from the bench to the prosecutor that he
admitted that the quality of preparation was such that the matter should and
could have been settled weeks previously. There was a history of many
unanswered e-mails from the defendant, telephone calls to the council not
returned and letters sent to wrong addresses. This estate agent was however
guilty. He was given a conditional discharge for six months and no costs were
ordered.
The third and final case that
afternoon had the prosecutor presenting a clearly documented file of over ten
pages with umpteen e-mails, phone calls and letters to and from the defendant
over seven years laid out in meticulous fashion. A garage owner had purchased a
freehold comprising a garage, two retail outlets and flat. He had let the flat
and shops and carried out a car repair business from that area of the premises
making, he told us later, about £10,000 p/a profit from the garage. The only
problem for him was that he had not received planning permissions for the car
repair business and alterations to the building. The brief history was that
after hoping that his ignoring the council`s letters would make the problem go
away and belatedly not taking professional advice when he eventually responded
this defendant had virtually no mitigation to offer after he had pleaded guilty
except to apologise for his inaction as above and a litany of feeble excuses.
When it came to his completing
a "means form" prior to sentencing it took a lengthy question and
answer session to prise from him the profit figures over the years of illegal
trading. His defiance of council planning requirements was expensive. He was
ordered to pay around £11,000 in fine and costs.
When councils set their minds
to it their prosecutions can be a model of efficiency but when they go wrong
they go badly wrong and that costs us all.
SENTENCING IS AS FASHIONABLE AS WOMENS` HEMLINES
06. Jun. 2010. – 13:57:25
"Pleading guilty to the
police should be rewarded with a lighter sentence", said Lord Leveson Court
of Appeal Judge and chairman of the new Sentencing Council.
John Thornhill, Chairman of the
Magistrates` Association, is quoted saying, “If a defendant holds up his
hand at the earliest opportunity then I have no problem with credit being
given. Whether a guilty plea could be taken at the police station was another
matter, but if the court is presented with a defendant who has already admitted
guilt, then why not have a more structured scale of discounts to reflect that?”
Lord Justice Leveson wants to
review the discounts for guilty pleas to award bigger credit to defendants who
admit their crimes even before the first hearing – the idea has potential for
saving money in police and court time and helps victims and witnesses. However
lawyers share John Thornhill’s caution by warning that unless carefully managed
it could put suspects under pressure to plead guilty at crimes that they had
not committee and would lead to miscarriages of justice.
Defendants who plead guilty
"at the earliest opportunity" are usually allowed one third reduction
in their sentence be it financial, unpaid work or custody. If an additional
reduction is given for a guilty plea at the police station it could lead to
dissimilar sentences for guilty pleas to similar offences by similar defendants
where one offender wishes to hedge his options under legal advice. All this is
based on the old story of persuading the donkey to get a move on by waving a
carrot under its nose. But discussing carrots as incentives for donkeys is akin
to rocket engineers discussing propulsion as action; the rocket cannot exist
without also including reaction. So with regard to incentivising a donkey`s
forward locomotion we need to discuss the corollary and that is a stick to the
donkey`s rump if it refuses to move. I would opine that many? most? defendants
cannot comprehend reductions in future sentences as they could understand
"more". I would suggest we cease reducing sentences for early pleas,
good behaviour etc. etc. and make it very clear that sentences will increase if
found guilty after a trial vis a vis a guilty plea made early. The sentences
themselves could theoretically be tailored to fit as now but the psychological addition
of time or money has more significance than the corresponding reduction.
There are traditional “hangers
and floggers” and there are so called prison reformers who find difficulty in
accepting incarceration for all but the most heinous crimes and offenders. The
central majority is following the penal pendulum as it makes its arc swinging
from left to right to left to right……………..jumping on and off as opinions
change. Who is to say eg that the use of Class A,B and C drugs will not be
decriminalised within the next twenty years or that jury trials will be abolished
for all indictable only crimes. Sentencing is as much a fashion product as
womens` hemlines.
OFF THE GUIDELINES JUDICIAL SENTENCING
05. Jun. 2010. – 14:04:49
DANGEROUS DOGS ;TIME FOR THE LAW TO BITE BACK
04. Jun. 2010. – 12:58:07
There are eight million dogs in the U.K. and of course each has at least a single owner. They are all descended from wolves; that is the dogs are.....although some might say they are higher up the tree of civilisation than some of the owners. The ancient Persians were the first to domesticate dogs and they and later civilisations in Egypt used them as hunting animals, guard dogs and pets. At times domestic dogs were buried as sacred animals in the Anubieion catacombs at Saqqara. Anubis (Inpew, Yinepu, Anpu) was an ancient Egyptian god of the underworld who guided and protected the spirits of the dead.
For many hundreds of years kings and queens of England have employed dogs for hunting and canine association with royalty is very much with us today. Dogs have been bred also for virtues other than the strength of their jaws which is solely related to their head size. Dogs in fiction are known to most of us; Bull`s Eye in Oliver Twist, Rin Tin Tin, Lassie. Alpine dogs and swimming dogs have saved many people in peril; police dogs and dogs for the blind are essential helpers to their human owners. And there perhaps is the nub of the point of this post.....dogs of whatever breed will, generally, behave according to the manner in which they have or have not been trained.
Until 1871 there was no legislation regarding dogs behaving badly. If you were a man of substance you took your gun and shot the offending creature and perhaps also its owner if he resisted. If you were poor it ate the same scraps as its owner and perhaps provided some protection as well as companionship. The Dogs Act of 1871 allowed a complaint to be made to a magistrate under civil law. Such a complaint occurs if a dog is not kept under proper control and is dangerous. Generally a dog is regarded as not being under proper control if it is neither on a lead nor muzzled. Without a complaint the Act cannot be enforced.
Dog bite incidents which happen dozens of times every day rarely make news unless a child is killed or the people involved can sometimes dubiously be described as “personalities”. Such was the case reported today when Ozzy Osbourne's old boss was fined £2,500 after his dog attacked a cyclist near
HOW MANY POLICE DOES IT TAKE TO ???
02. Jun. 2010. – 16:03:59
There is 1 inspector for every 3.04 sergeants
There is 1 chief inspector for every 3.85 inspectors
There is 1 superintendent for every 1.89 chief inspectors
There is 1 chief superintendent for every 2.1 superintendents
NO MORE ROGUE CAR CLAMPERS IN 2011
02. Jun. 2010. – 15:36:39
The outrageous actions of some? many? car clampers and the lack of effective control on their activities at local or national level has been a scandal. The recent conviction of one such gang and the jailing of its leader at Birmingham Crown Court will bring a smile to all who have had the misfortune to have been similarly fleeced of large amounts of hard earned cash.
It is heartening to know that in the Crime and Security Bill which received Royal Assent on 8 April there is provision to deal much more efficiently with rogue car clampers. There will be maximum limits set to fines possibly in line with those imposed by local authorities, signage will have to have parking conditions clearly set out, independent appeal processes will be established and effective licensing for clamping companies will be introduced. The Scots, so often more sensible than their English cousins in matters legal, outlawed clamping on private land in 1992.
NO USHER; NO COURT; NO JUSTICE
29. May. 2010. – 13:45:14
Morning courts run from 10.00am - 1.00pm. It is essential that as little time as possible is lost owing to inefficiencies especially those which are predictable. Although not directly related to this topic one small example will give an indication of top down instructions which are as sensible as a three legged camel race. Courts` daily lists which can run into dozens of names are presented to the bench in alphabetical order and numbered as such. Until recently the sometimes bulky corresponding court files would be presented to the legal adviser in the same order so when a case was called on by name and number everyone is literally reading off the same page. But recently owing to some court manager taking the view that for c£18K p/a office staff to sort the files before 10.00am was too time consuming that process was stopped. The result is that the c£40K p/a adviser has a bundle of files on his/her desk and spends court time sorting out the appropriate one when the case is called. Yes; it does appear that the monkeys are running the zoo.
Now back to the non CPS court....we enter at 10.00am on the dot with the legal adviser and unexpectedly find the courtroom empty. Our L/A tries the main entrance to the courtroom and finds it is locked! It appears we have not been assigned a court usher. The L/A phones security to unlock the door, a job usually done in conjunction with the usher or by the usher alone. Our bench quickly decides that we cannot efficiently conduct our court without an usher to regulate properly the comings and goings of the dozens of people we expect to appear. It is a task which occasionally a L/A would undertake if pressed; perhaps in a short trial with only one or two civilian witnesses but not on the scale envisaged for that morning. We retired from the court telling the L/A matters would proceed only when the court was properly staffed with an usher. At 10.30am we were informed that the court manager had re-arranged the ushers available and we were well served but half an hour of precious time had been needlessly lost.
I have no reason to think that other Magistrates` Courts are not undergoing similar results from reduced recruitment. Because financial cuts at our courts are like the iceberg which sunk the Titanic having only 10% visible above the waterline it will take a Daily Mail headline of an unforeseen major criminal event resulting from such inefficiencies to bring Her Majesty`s Court Services` attention to this attrition within the criminal justice system.
REGULATION OF INVESTIGATORY POWERS ACT 2000
28. May. 2010. – 16:58:43
Two cheers for our new coalition of CamerClegg. In its Agreement a ban is proposed on the use of powers in this Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 by local authorities unless a magistrate authorises their use and it is required for stopping serious crime. I am unclear whether this indicates that a magistrates` bench in court will have to approve the action or a JP on his/her own. I am sure we will know soon enough. From a libertarian viewpoint this is a good start.
IDENTITY CARDS BURIED WITH LABOUR!
27. May. 2010. – 14:06:37
In late December 2008 I was sitting on a case where a driver had refused to give his details when required by a police officer. For a reason now forgotten during this hearing we had some "downtime" and were in the retiring room where on impulse I looked at the bound annual copies of "The Justice of the Peace" on the bookshelf. I chose to look at the edition of 1908 and found the page for the same December date of that year. And there it was in black and white Edwardian prose; the case law where a driver on the request of a police constable was required to give his name and address. Licenses to drive were for the future. A gentleman had been motoring through Hyde Park and for whatever reason refused to give his details to the constable when asked. The case duly reached a higher level where it was decided that a constable had the right to demand a driver`s name and address.
Was that a coincidence? Do we have free will? Will the world end in 2012? Will England win the World Cup?
NOT ALL THE FUN OF THE FAIR
Who hasn`t played hoopla? Throw a ring around a peg and bag a prize. Along with "roll the penny" hoopla was the most widely played stall at local carnivals and fun fairs when I was allowed out with friends and no parents to bother us......I was about 11 at the time. Anybody eg who accepts the challenge to "find the lady" from an East European on the pavement in London`s Oxford Street deserves no sympathy for his/her loss but a hoopla stall in Blackpool??????
On a few occasions I have queried the veracity and purpose of the statistics produced by those who are interested in propagating their opinions on whether crime and everything associated with it is going up, down or sideways. It would appear that Lancaster University statistics lecturer Dr David Lucy showed it would take a player over 2,622 attempts to “stand a 99 per cent probability of success” to throw a hoop over the peg at a stall run by Darren Casey. Without having the academic expertise to comment on the maths of the statement of likelihood of success but believing that there is rarely 100% probability of anything apart from death and taxes he seems to be saying that the punters were being ripped off. Blackpool magistrates agreed. Casey was sentenced to 14 weeks custody, suspended for one year, ordered to complete 270 hours of community service and pay £2,000 in court costs. He also pleaded guilty to "allowing a child to gamble", and was handed 135 hours of community service and ordered to cough £575 in costs.
Perhaps Dr Lucy should be invited to study crime statistics produced by Uncle Tom Cobley and all and find out if any cheating has been going on?
POLICE, HUMANISM AND DIVERSITY
26. May. 2010. – 12:05:52
It seems that notwithstanding the above Hertfordshire police have recruited two humanist advisers. In the full report there is this paragraph;
“are atheists and agnostics who make sense of the world using reason, experience and shared human values. We take responsibility for our actions and base our ethics on the goals of human welfare, happiness and fulfilment. We seek to make the best of the one life we have by creating meaning and purpose for ourselves, individually and together.”
DRUGS IN PRISONS
24. May. 2010. – 11:20:38
On 12th April I posted "CAN DRUGS BE EXCLUDED FROM PRISONS?". There have always been unsubstantiated reports that prison officers prefer their charges to be semi docile having had their regular fix than to be faced with 1000 offenders on cold turkey. Whatever the truth my impression is that if there were a will to control drugs entering prisons and money were available then the way would be found."
A couple of weeks ago a two part reality TV documentary of life in Wormwood Scrubs was screened. I`ve visited two large jails but not the Scrubs. They are not surprisingly depressing places for the visitor....three to a cell about the size of a garden shed where the inmates eat and defecate with only a curtain to separate the two bodily functions. In both establishments the senior prison officer who was our escort.....we were a group of JPs, lawyers and a judge.........was at pains to explain the strenuous efforts to curb drugs entering the buildings and their consequent circulation through the prison. The TV programme relayed the same sentiments from prison officers at the Scrubs....sniffer dogs, strip searching and sanctions available to offenders caught. But then we were shown the visiting hall[s] where despite CCTV and roaming warders with dogs physical transfer of drugs was not the most difficult task because there was no physical barrier between convict and visitor. I can understand the argument that to allow such contact can keep prisoners mentally stable and looking forward to re-joining their families when their stretch is completed. But in my opinion it is a bit like having the car`s air conditioning on full blast in the desert with the window open.
In the Sunday Times yesterday David Leppard in a thoughtful article provided some interesting information from an as yet unpublished report from the Policy Exchange think tank. It says jail prices of heroin, cocaine and cannabis are ten times street value and consequently a great temptation to prison staff to smuggle in and sell on. Of the 90,000 inmates of Britain`s prisons at any one time 14,000 were using drugs at least once a week. The Met police in 2006 found at least 1000 of the ten thousand prison officers were receiving income from corrupt practices including smuggling drugs.
Certainly if one third of prisoners is high or looking forward to their next fix it must make life easier for the staff who are without doubt very poorly paid for the job they do.
There are those and I am one who advocate the decriminalisation of currently class A- class C drugs and concerted efforts to treat drug addiction as a medical problem as opposed to a criminal problem. The consequences of such addiction are often ruinous to those close to in addition to the addict him/herself and in prisons drug addiction and suicide are not wholly dissociated bedfellows.
Dame Anne Owers the Chief Inspector of Prisons told an audience last week that British prisons have too many inmates suffering with mental health problems. She told her audience that when mental hospitals were closed down in the 1980s and 90s Care in the Community was promised. “In practice that has translated into Care in Custody. A large percentage of prisoners are mentally ill and prison officers are not trained to deal with them.” I think there is not one magistrate or judge who would disagree with those remarks.
I posted yesterday that short sentences are necessary. They are. But so are places of refuge and treatment for those who cannot cope with their lives. They are called asylums and every town or county used to have one. Now these buildings are often blocks of flats. Another example of misguided thinking and planning by those playing Monopoly with real money and real populations and who walk away from the very mess they created. Will it be any different this time?
SHORT PRISON SENTENCES ARE A NECESSITY
When sitting with recently appointed Justices who by this stage have had extensive and expensive training there is one factor which no amount of preparation can equip them with and that is a backlog of experience in sentencing. Six months` custody is the courts` maximum. Faced eg with a defendant with no criminal record convicted after trial of punching, kicking and pushing to the floor his pregnant wife where on the ladder of punishment do you place this man? With experience one thinks back to previous similar assaults and compares the situation with aggravating and mitigating features of other assaults. In other words a template in the mind is added to the official guidelines. When that process is explained to a new colleague his or her reluctance to consider the maximum sentence as a possibility is overcome in a logical structured fashion.
On one aspect of sentencing all colleagues are in agreement. We do not take any pleasure in imposing jail sentences. Contrary to the outbursts of some ignorant politicians there are sometimes occasions when there is no other option.
Such was the case earlier this year when Graham was in the dock. He was thirty nine going on sixty. His face was custard coloured, his hair....what he had....hadn`t been combed or washed for months, his sweat shirt was more sweat than shirt and his jeans were about two sizes too big for somebody approaching six foot and only about nine stone. He appeared for sentencing for breaching the punishment for theft of a few items from a supermarket imposed two months previously; a 7.00pm - 7.00am three month curfew. It wasn`t that he`d got home a little late on one occasion or left a little early one morning; he had been away from his address for at least five of the curfew hours on seven times in a month.
He had four pages of "previous". He had had every sentence in the book for drug possession, three courses of drug rehabilitation, umpteen thefts and robberies and had been inside many times. Indeed he had been released from prison for a previous low value theft only two weeks prior to having committed the offence for which he was given a curfew with that bench`s remarks noted on the court file," We are imposing a curfew and not custody. We are giving you a final opportunity to try to sort yourself out." His solicitor mitigated for him with obvious great difficulty. One of the factors that sentencers have to consider is the protection of the public. After conversations with my new colleague based on comments and sentiments above and agreement with our third member we sentenced him to fifteen weeks custody.
Those who would alter the system to eliminate short sentences altogether should visit their local Magistrates` Court from time to time and acquaint themselves with what real people do and real people suffer and that those of us privileged to sit on the bench whilst not living with the Book of Leviticus under our pillows do our jobs as justly as we can on behalf of a society which doesn`t always know whether it wants hanging or harmony for miscreants.