Term 2 Lecture 8- Parole System Flashcards

1
Q

What are the key readings?

A
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2
Q

What is the overall reoffending rate?

A

25.5%

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3
Q

What is the key drive for the prison population?

A

Not how many people we send to prison but for how long we send them for

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4
Q

What is the % change since 2012/19 in life sentences?

A

+88%

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5
Q

What is the % change since 2012/19 in 4 years + sentences?

A

+40%

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6
Q

What is the % change since 2012/19 in less than 6 month sentences?

A

-31%

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7
Q

When was the highest tariff length for murder 2003-2013? (Crewe et al)

A

2013, 21.1. 2003, 12.5

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8
Q

What should parole be around according to Arnott and Creighton?

A

The views of the victim
What level of risk is acceptable
If we should demostrate society as merciful
Prisoner behaviour
If release is acceptable to public opinion

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9
Q

When was the parole board for England and Wales created?

A

Created by the Parole Board by the Criminal Justice Act 1967 following the abolition of capital punishment

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10
Q

What is the parole board for England and Wales?

A

The Board is an independent court-like body that works with other criminal justice agencies to protect the public by risk assessing prisoners to decide whether they can be safely released into the community
Sponsored by Ministry of Justice

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11
Q

Who makes the parole board rules?

A

Justice Secretary makes Parole Board Rules and directions on matters to be taken into account

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12
Q

Who are the members of the parole board?

A

292 members (as of March 31, 2023)
48 Judicial Members
61 Psychologist Members
34 Psychiatrist Members
165 Independent Members ((probation, legal and other backgrounds)
10 former active members

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13
Q

What does the Parole board determine?

A

Deciding whether some prisoners who have been recalled to prison can be re-released
Advising the Secretary of State on any release or recall matters referred to it
Advising the Secretary of State whether indeterminate prisoners can be moved from closed to open conditions
Deciding if prisoners who have committed offences of serious public concern, such as terrorism and serious child sex offences, can be released
Deciding whether to release prisoners serving extended determinate sentence

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14
Q

What is the risk test?

A

Considering if the release of prisoners who come before it, if the prisoner should remain detaind

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15
Q

What are the standard licence conditions?

A

Behaviour
Residence
Contact with supervisor
Work
Travel

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16
Q

What are the additional licence conditions?

A

Contacts
Possessions
Programmes
Alcohol

17
Q

What is the paper decisions from those who remain in custody in parole?

A

52%

18
Q

What is the paper decisions for those who are released?

A

3.7%

19
Q

What is the oral hearings for those who remain in custody?

A

42%

20
Q

What is the oral hearings for those who are released?

A

51%

21
Q

What are the controversies for parole?

A

Prisoners sentenced to Imprisonment for Public for Public Protection (IPPs)
Fall out from the Worboys case
Current government consultation: ‘Root and Branch review of the parole system’

22
Q

What are the issues from the Worboys case?

A

Risk and decision making
Victims
Openness and transparency
IPP prisoners
Independence

23
Q

What is the Worboys case?

A

Worboys committed several sexual offences on young women
Convicted on 1 count of rape, 5 SAs, 1 attempted assault, 12 drugging charge
Parole panel released after 8 year minimium tariff and IPP
Received 2 more life sentences with 6 year minimum tariff

24
Q

When were IPP created?

A

Created in the Criminal Justice Act 2003 and implemented in 2005. Curtailed in 2008 and finally abolished in 2012.

25
Q

What do IPPs consist of?

A

Sentence consists of the ‘tariff’, the minimum time that must be served, but then can only be released when Parole Board decides it is safe to do so

26
Q

What do IPPs intend to do?

A

Intended to ensure that dangerous offenders were detained until their risk was manageable in the community

27
Q

How many IPP prisoners are in prison from recall?

A

1625

28
Q

How many prisoners remained in prison post tariff from IPP?

A

99%

29
Q

What did IPP cause?

A

High levels of self harm and lack of trust for prisoners since they were meant to be rehabilitated

30
Q

What are the criticisms from IPP prison population?

A

Lacks clear strategy priority, operational detail and performance measures

31
Q

What are the recommendations for IPP?

A

Small expert committee to work with judiciary to develop a resentencing exercise for all IPP prisoners with 3 strategies

32
Q

What are the strategies from the IPP recommendations?

A

(1) balancing protection of the public with justice for the individual offender;
(2) recognising and protecting the independence of the judiciary; and
(3) ensuring that no harsher sentence is imposed retrospectively. We also appreciate that establishing a resentencing exercise will be administratively complex.

33
Q

What were the changes to the parole board rules?

A

Parole Board given greater control of the dossier
Reconsideration requests:
Secretary of State or Prisoner (the parties)
Grounds of ‘Irrationality’ or ‘Procedural unfairness’
21 day time limit
145 applications since July 2019 – March 2020 (130 from prisoners/15 from Secretary of State)
20 ordered (18 from prisoners/2 from Secretary of State)

34
Q

What is the root and branch review?

A

A new precautionary approach to the release of a top-tier of the most serious offenders
Changes to refine the statutory release test will be introduced to make it more prescriptive
Justice Secretary power to veto release decisions

35
Q

What are the characteristics of the root and branch review?

A

Increase number of PB members from law enforcement backgrounds
Hearings now in public when in ‘interests of justice’
Probation and prison witnesses not allowed to give an opinion on release . Only one ‘official view’
Must be former police officers in some panels

36
Q

What are the proposals from the root and branch review?

A

Refine the statutory release test to make it prescriptive
Increase the number of the parole board members from law enforcement background so they sit on panels in top tier classes
Improve the transparency and victim participation in the parole process
Secretary of state has the power to block a decision by the parole board to release a top tier offencer