Crime Problem? Just Lock 'em in the Lavatory
And so the story of the moral implosion of the British prison system comes to this: we are imprisoning people in toilets. Doncaster prison - run by the private firm Serco - was designed to hold 800 people, but it now pens in more than a thousand. So the governors have put beds in the toilets, and detained people there for more than 18 hours a day, week after week. In toilets. In Britain. Today.
There are now two prison systems in this country. There is Her Majesty's Prison Service, where mad and broken people are warehoused alongside the genuinely violent in cramped and fetid cells. Then there is the Fantasy Prison System, implanted by the press in the public imagination, where pampered prisoners are given foot massages while watching flat-screen TVs.
No matter how many prisons I visit, from Wormwood Scrubs to Feltham Young Offenders Institute, I cannot find the holiday camps. Instead, I find prisons that clunkingly conform to every "tough" demand of the right - and are therefore placing you and your family in greater danger.
Allow me to explain. When our prisons contained 40,000 people, back in 1993, they managed to make 47 per cent of the inmates go straight. But today - after cramming twice as many people into almost the same space - that rate has dramatically plummeted to just 25 per cent. The rest graduate to the same or worse crimes.
We know what makes criminals less likely to reoffend. We have known for years, from study after study after study - but drunk on rhetoric, we are speeding in the opposite direction. So let's go through the recipe that really turns prisoners into law-abiding citizens, abandoned in the mid-1990s when Michael Howard got Britain smoking the crack-down crack.
Ingredient One: Transfer the mentally ill into secure hospitals. The first thing that strikes you in any prison is how many of the people there are insane. One 60-year-old man diagnosed with serious brain damage staggered up to me in the bowels of Wormwood Scrubs thinking I was his father. The Government admits 13 per cent of our prisoners have schizophrenia and 70 per cent have one or more diagnosable mental disorder. I could fill this newspaper with descriptions of prisoners who stab their own necks with knives or set fire to themselves at Her Majesty's Pleasure.
There is another way. The state of Pennsylvania was facing the same prison problem as Britain - so they decided that if the police arrest a mentally ill person, he should no longer go into the normal courts system. When, say, Sally Judson - a diagnosed schizophrenic who developed a heroin habit - was picked up for disorderly conduct recently, she was taken to a mental health "court". Instead of jailing her, they drew up an action plan with her. They found her a doctor, a therapist and a waitressing job. If she relapses on heroin, there is a rehab place waiting for her. This system works: mentally ill people have a 55 per cent reoffending rate in the normal courts, but in the mental health courts it is just 10 per cent.
Ingredient Two: Make sure prisoners stay in touch with their families. You can hear the Gaunt-groans and the Littlejohn-lies now: who cares if some criminal bastard can't speak to his baby-mother? But the evidence shows this is the single biggest factor in keeping a criminal from reoffending. If you manage to keep your partner, you are 20 per cent more likely to stay out of jail. But our prisons actually militate against this. Because of the severe overcrowding, some 37,000 prisoners are being held more than three hours' journey from home, and 5,000 are being held more than six hours away. Their mostly broke families can't afford the long journey. Telephone? BT charges up to seven times more to call home from prison than it would cost from a normal phone box. Far away and expensive to phone, nearly half of male prisoners currently lose touch with their families.
Ingredient Three: Make sure prisoners aren't illiterate and homeless when they walk out the prison gates. When they arrive, a third of prisoners can't read or write a word. They almost invariably leave as they came. The Adult Learning Inspectorate found fewer than 8 per cent of prisoners are taught to read and then given meaningful work that could lead to a job on the outside. Worse, one-third of prisoners are released to "No Fixed Abode" - a friend's couch, if they're lucky.
In Liverpool prison, I saw a brilliant scheme where prisoners are taught construction skills - and then use them to do up an abandoned council house to live in when they leave. It's a crime-busting double whammy: work skills, and a house nobody else wanted. Why isn't this being done in every prison in Britain?
Ingredient Four: Medicalise prisoners' drug addictions. Some 12 per cent of prisoners are heroin addicts, imprisoned either for possessing the drug or committing property crimes to feed their ravaging need. Wouldn't it be better to spend the £40,000 of jail money to put them in rehab? True, heroin addiction is so powerful that the even the best rehab in the world fails with 80 per cent of addicts. But for them, we can prescribe a clean, legal supply for £4,000 a year. Then they can lead healthy lives: Arthur Conan Doyle and the father of modern surgery, William Halsted, did. When the Swiss did this, burglary fell by 70 per cent.
Ingredient Five: Make sure prison is only for violent and sexual offenders. There are about 16,000 vaguely sane people in our jails who have committed violent or sexual offences. They need to be banged up while they are rehabilitated, for however long it takes. But if they are crammed in with 64,000 others - the shoplifters and cannabis dealers - nobody gets any treatment and nobody gets any better.
Indeed, the evidence shows the opposite happens. Professor Carol Hedderman has calculated that the growth in the prison population is due to a huge rise in short sentences of six months or less. They are all for crimes that used to be dealt with by community service - like the two teenage boys in Deerbolt who have just been sentenced to 15 months in an adult jail for graffiti. That's long enough to put in place all the factors that drive up crime - they lose their job, their house and their girlfriend, and their debts spiral - but not long enough to teach them anything, even if we tried. This is the reason for the surge in reoffending.
Yet still the Government builds more mega-prisons, while the Tories yelp for them to go even further and faster. Why? Every politician wants to be seen as the Toughest Daddy, cheered on by a press that raves against a prison system that doesn't exist. But the "tough" approach - shove 'em in the toilets, teach 'em nothing - produces more crime. The macho swagger hides glass testicles. No: we need to show this isn't about soft vs. tough, but about smart, crime-busting policies vs. dumb, crime-boosting policies.
But for today, reason and evidence remain locked away in the prison toilets. Isn't it time we let them out?
--Johann Hari
©independent.co.uk
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12 Comments so far
Show AllNever mind. Write a book about it and in 200 years time it'll be turned into a musical and people will pay the 200 years time equivalent of 150 bucks to weep over it. And then spend the next two months at dinner parties telling their friends how sensitive and caring they are because they wept over it.
Just don't expect sympathy, insight, intelligence or weeping now. We reserve our sorrow and caring for fictionalised history. It's safer that way.
As are the cases for continued war and our buddies Halliburton and Black Water, prison is a money machine. The longer we can keep both going so that criminals return and our troops serve four and five returns to the war started by our "elected" oval office cretin, the better for all his buddies.
Americans, too, have been locked in the lavatory since 1980. There are, however, no beds in here and George Wanker Bush has been using the toilet multiple times daily and never flushes it.
As a teacher for almost 17 years, in what used to be called "The Youth Authority" in a U.S. state, housing convicted male felons 18 to 25 years of age, I can emphatically agree with this writer.
For every inch education moved most of these young men towards a useful productive possibility, the combined efforts of the educational leadership and the corrosive effects of sub-standard correctional officers of a brutal mindset and the laughable, living unit counselors (an alias for correctional officer) eradicated daily that inch and six more just like it.
The best a teacher could hope for is a connection not being an authoritarian, but as a parent might hope to do. Sliding the education in through a studied moment of their willing reception to it.
I am a firm believer in small group incarceration/rehabilitation without the Gestapo mentality of most guards, correctional officers, for the 80% or more who are not violent offenders.
Sex offenders are in a whole league where even the rest of the prison population finds beyond taboo. Very damn few are able to surmount their deficiencies to not recommit. Some experts say none are able. Nothing, short of "male reduction" will prevent recidivism.
The year before I retired was the worst of my career. I had to report allegations of sexual contact with "wards" against a correctional officer I liked as a human being because he wasn't a Gestapo guard.
As a teacher, I have a legal and moral obligation to report any abuse on a child, minor student, or ward of the state that I witness or hear viable allegations. There was no way I could not report what I was told. There were too many coinciding events that were arranged while the ward(s) were my students. Too many linking phone calls requesting the same ward(s) to go to a particular location for a work detail, usually an empty classroom.
I was required to tell the sordid story up through the bureaucracy. After I retired I was subpoenaed to testify with him sitting across the table from me. I had no problem looking directly at him without averting my eyes.
He had made insinuations of what I could expect from the guard culture prior to his being quietly put on administrative leave. It was just one more uncomfortable fact in an already intolerable, professional environment governed by a collective stupidity by intent. A female living unit counselor had been murdered a few years before by a ward who had been a student of mine and whom I wrote documents on and were ignored.
The karma was building up around too much bad water. The day I left, retired, two of my friends, also teachers, just walked out with me and never went back. They both managed to coerce a medical, or disability, retirement out of the state.
The first thing we need to do is to have the (public) discussion, and decide what we send people to prison FOR. Is it revenge, deterrence, rehabilitation, protection of the public, or some combination of the above?
The second thing we need to do is what Johann suggests: take a pragmatic look at what works, and DO THAT.
How hard is that?
Pattern-chaser
"Who cares, wins"
A woman steals a few loaves of bread to feed her child after its father leaves with all their money, gets 4 years and the child (8 years old) ends up in the foster system.
A teenage boy becomes a quarriplegic, needs a fortune in medicone to survive and is in constant pain but the doctors wont let him go, so he's forced to asks a freind to kill him, video and euthinasia is done, kind friend is given 8 years for murder.
A 50 year old man rapes a 7 year old girl giving her aids and get 3 months in prison, full rehabilitation in an area full of children and nobody is told what he did, nor is he looked at when 3 neighborhood kids are raped after their houses are broken into.
The criminal system is fucked up and only the inocent suffer from it.
BRAND THE PEDOFILES AND RAPISTS (tied the bastards down and shove a hot poker with a P or R on their cheeks), DEATH PENALTY FOR ALL SERVING A LIFE SENTENCE.
I cannot ephasize the bold writing enough because the 2 neccesary breaks of law and the horrific crime are all parts of my life story, i knew the foster girl, the quardiplegic and his savior were friends and another friend was one of the rapists victims, she is suffering with aids and unable to get proper treatment, while the bastard gets full tax paid medical treatment while living in general society.
i enjoyed reading this and learned alot.
This government is insane. First they create shitholes of poverty in the middle of obscene wealth and then put people in jail for getting stoned.
This country is in the toilet.
Wanna hear a real double whammy? I got caught with meth and did two months in jail. Then I had to do inpatient rehab treatment. There they found I had ADHD. During my two months of outpatient treatment (the only time I had medical) what did they give me? Prescription speed!
Duh!!!
"The moral implosion in the UK is that you have gangs of teenagers making life impossible for so many decent people in your country."
Thats right Ariel_Sharon .. lets just gas them. What do you think ??
We are living in a sick, sick world!
"God, look at your glorious creations now."
The moral implosion in the UK is that you have gangs of teenagers making life impossible for so many decent people in your country.
They even attack police mob-style and WIN. Its appealing but not when the mob is a bunch of criminals...