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Tailoring sentences to the lack of prison places

(4 Posts)
Luckygirl3 Mon 01-Jun-26 18:10:16

"The judge, Recorder ZZ KC, said that while the offending was very serious and clearly warranted a custodial sentence, he said XX and YY were both hard-working men and prisons were full so he didn’t want to jail them."

The above from my local paper.

It is slightly worrying that a judge is openly saying that he has not been able to give the correct sentence because prisons are full. Their offence was serious - dealing drugs - and knowing that they are unlikely to get a prison sentence is going to encourage other dealers I fear.

Maremia Mon 01-Jun-26 18:30:12

It is concerning.

Casdon Mon 01-Jun-26 18:57:26

I read that the other day that a new prison is being built in Buckinghamshire - I’ve forgotten the name, but it will house 1500 prisoners, so quite an increase in total prison estate. Not sure when it will open though.

Doodledog Mon 01-Jun-26 19:27:34

I think the answer is to look at what sort of crimes warrant prison sentences, and increase the number of community service punishments for those who are not a danger to the public.

Used imaginatively, they could make some criminals more employable and reduce recidivism, and plug gaps in public services such as painting over graffiti or planting parks and gardens. They needn't be an 'easy option' - there could be supervised hostels for participants to sleep in, or they could be combined with tags and curfews for those who stay at home.

The problem would be that useful community work could take jobs from non-criminals, so that would have to be taken into consideration, but there is probably no need for non-violent criminals to be in jail.