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May 13, 2005: Lord Woolf: Probation is "Key to Tackling Reoffending"
Lord Woolf, the Lord Chief Justice, delivered the Cambridge
University Institute of Criminology's
first Radzinowicz Lecture, on 'Making Sense of Sentencing', yesterday. Lord
Woolf stated that it was critical what happens to the offender following
sentence, and welcomed the
National
Offender Management Service as it should “enable the
Prison Service and the
Probation
Service, by working jointly… to achieve more than they could separately”. He
argued that government needed to identify the resources to support sentencing
policy over the next 4 years and then tailor policies to fit the resources
available. As Lord Woolf put it:
“In the past policies have been embarked on without
sufficient attention being paid to whether or not the resources (I am not only
referring to financial resources) are in place to enable the policy to be
successfully implemented.”
Lord Woolf also argued that there is only so much change that
the criminal justice system could absorb at any one time, and what was now
required was a period of consolidation. The system had reached the limit of the
amount of change it can, for the time being, absorb. This was not, he argued:
“an expression of judicial conservatism. For the government
to exercise the restraint in legislating I have suggested would be a radical
change in government policy towards criminal justice. The government should
decide to exercise a self denying ordinance and declare a closed season on
sentencing legislation. I understand the desire to respond to public reaction
over the latest horrendous crime. However, to resist this pressure would make
a significant contribution to achieving the real gains that the government and
judiciary would like to see.”
Probation was the key to tacking re-offending:
“If a community sentence, which is far less expensive, would
be suitable for an offender, as a punishment for his crime and it would be
constructive, it is wrong in principle to send him to prison. If there are no
resources for drug treatment and training orders, it is pointless imposing
such orders... The Probation Service is the key to tackling re-offending. This
is so whether we are considering the person who is sentenced to a Community
Sentence or the person who has been sentenced to imprisonment and is returning
to the community. The role of the Probation Service is critical. We have to
raise the standards of the Probation Service. The first priority is to improve
their morale and effectiveness.
We now have more police. As a result more offenders are going to come before
the courts… We must now tackle what is not being achieved by sentences that
the courts impose. We must make inroads into the abysmal re-offending rates.
Success in doing this could transform the situation. Our efforts must not be
deflected by the protests from those who ignore the reality of the situation
we are in.
Lord Woolf considered that in future imprisonment should
be used primarily in 4 situations:
- Where imprisonment is essential for public protection.
- Where a crime's seriousness is such that it can only be
marked by a significant prison sentence.
- A 'clang of the prison door' sentence i.e. a sentence to
mark the serious nature of offending by a very short time in prison combined
with other punishments.
- Where the crime itself does not make prison necessary but
it becomes necessary as n offender refuses to comply with other sentences.
Lord Woolf argued for the following measures to bring “sense
into sentencing”:
- Developing a consensus as to what resources should be
available to the criminal justice system and ensuring that those resources are
used in the manner which is most likely to provide the best protection for the
public.
- Using the platform that Parliament and the Government have
now provided to halt the continuing rise in the use of imprisonment and
instead confining imprisonment primarily for the most serious offences and, in
particular, for violent and dangerous offenders;
- Making the broad range of community punishments really
meaningful so that they prevent re-offending and inspire confidence in the
public;
- Providing more extensive drug and other substance abuse
testing and training;
- Relying more on properly enforced fines and the
confiscation of the proceeds of crime.
- Avoiding further legislation except when it is absolutely
necessary so as provide the courts and NOMS with the opportunity they need to
absorb the changes that have been made and deliver an effective criminal
justice system.
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