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Prison chiefs: Short sentences are a university of crime

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Published Date: 10 June 2009
MANAGERS of Scotland's prisons' estate yesterday backed the Scottish Government's policy of eradicating short-term sentences.
Mike Ewart , the chief executive of the Scottish Prison Service, said that locking criminals up for six months or less made the community a more dangerous place. He said short-term sentences did nothing to rehabilitate offenders, they just exposed th
em to a "university of crime" behind bars.

Mr Ewart was supported by the director of prisons at the SPS, Rona Sweeney, who said that short-term sentences did nothing to prevent reoffending.

The SNP government wants to scrap short-term sentences and replace them with tough community sentences designed to make criminals work hard rather than doing nothing inside prison. But this approach has been criticised by the Conservatives, who have warned the Scottish Government has a "soft touch" approach to crime and that tougher prison sentences are the answer.

The proposal is contained in the Criminal Justice and Licensing Bill, which came before the Scottish Parliament's justice committee yesterday.

Mr Ewart told the committee the bill was aimed at making the "best use" of prisons.

The current prison population stands at about 8,500 – but Mr Ewart said this masked the 40,000 admissions that the service deals with in a year.

Claims by sheriffs that short sentences can give relief to communities were questioned by Mr Ewart.

He said: "The overall question of community safety might be compromised more by a short sentence than not."





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  • Last Updated: 09 June 2009 9:48 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish prisons
 
1

Colin B,

Bearsden 10/06/2009 02:21:02
Ewart is hopeless - he is more interested in protecting prisoners, his staff, and the useless probabtion officers.
He mislead Newsnight last year but Kenny MCCaskill lets civil servants formulate poli y for him not administer not vice versa
2

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 10/06/2009 03:59:13
To stop them being Universities of crime,bring back Hard Labour. Work their derierres off, until they are so knackered as to be too tired to plot, watch TV or take Law Degrees in Jail.
Jail is for punishment, not rehabilitation.The two should be entirely separate.
Conduct in prison,ie work attitude,attitude to staff and other prisoners, should be the only criteria for parole of any description being granted.
Keep the psychobabble psychologists, psychiatrists etc away from them until their sentences are over.Then have a mandatory 6-12 months rehabilitation period. They transgress during that time, back to prison for the unexpired period of rehab, and then repeat the process!
Prison is not prison in UK, it is an expensive, Private Members Club, made more costly to the tax payers, by the Lawyers troughing at the Legal Aid and Compensation trough.
3

Tracker,

10/06/2009 06:37:06
In another story in today's paper a sheriff decided against giving two thieves community sentences because he believed others would have a bad influence on them.

Short sentences do not work and community sentences do not work. Make the sentences tough, and make criminals fear going to prison. Criminals must lose the whip hand.
4

Voldemort,

Edinburgh 10/06/2009 06:45:23
This would be the governments cue to say 'what a fab idea, anything to keep the public 'safer'!'

- then behind the scenes ....

'Whew, we got out of building more jails then !'

'Aye, mair champers at the christmas pairty this year !'

'What about the people ?'

'Acht, screw them! Mair than half o'them didnae vote for me!'
5

Teofilio Cubillas,

10/06/2009 14:30:05
In today's Scotsman we have an article explaining why short prison sentences are ineffective and another citing a sheriff who ruled out community service for two housebreakers because it would expose them to bad influences.

There you have it, a 'justice' system completely bereft of ideas about how to deal with crime. Just keep a baseball bat under your bed because these half-wits do nothing to deter criminals.
6

screwloose or loosesrcew,

12/06/2009 19:06:14

So the prison system is again the "University of Crime"

Utter rubbish and without foundation a phrase that has been perpetuated by all the empty heads.

If prison is the "university" what about the primary and secondary part of the system 16 years of criminal education before they get to prison fully trained!

No wonder we are in the state we are in!

#1 your comments are widely inaccurate


 

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