Grimsby Telegraph

Plans to cut prison sentences criticised

LABOUR SLAMS ‘DRASTIC’ 60-DAY EARLY RELEASE MOVE

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A MOVE to potentiall­y allow prisoners to shave two months off their jail time is the “most drastic form of early release” ever witnessed in England and Wales, according to Labour.

Justice Secretary Alex Chalk on Monday announced an extension to the end of custody supervised licence (ECSL) scheme, taking it from 18 days to a maximum of 60 days in a bid to ease overcrowdi­ng pressures in prisons. The Conservati­ve UK Government has insisted the measure will be temporary and only apply to so-called “low-level offenders”.

Mr Chalk made the announceme­nt via a written ministeria­l statement to Parliament after 8pm, a situation Labour branded “plainly inadequate given the gravity of the situation”, before attending the Commons in person yesterday to update MPs. Shabana Mahmood, the shadow justice secretary, said the extension was “unpreceden­ted”.

Replying to Mr Chalk’s statement in the Commons, she said: “Let us be in no doubt, this is the most drastic form of early release for prisoners that this country has ever seen, and in his 11-page and 10-minute long statement today, it merited one paragraph. “This is a measure which will cause shockwaves and deep concern across our country, and the Secretary of State seems to think a quiet written ministeria­l statement published late last night and one paragraph today is good enough – it is not.”

The Labour MP posed a number of questions for her opposite number, including how many people had so far been released via the scheme, what prisons are making use of it and whether convicted domestic abusers and stalkers are eligible under its terms. Ms Mahmood added: “The Government has refused all requests to be transparen­t about the scale and the impact of this scheme, this is no way to run the criminal justice system, or indeed the country.”

Mr Chalk did not provide answers to her questions but assured that the Government would take “every step to protect the public”.

The Cabinet minister said there would be safeguards in place, including a gold command veto that would mean if a prison governor has “concerns about safety, then that person will not be released”.

The Justice Secretary announced in October that the Government would use the powers it has to allow the prison service to let some prisoners out of jail up to 18 days early to ease overcrowdi­ng.

But with recent Ministry of Justice statistics showing that prisons in England and Wales are still nearing capacity, Mr Chalk opted on Monday to extend ECSL measures “to around 35-60 days”.

The MoJ said that prisons would have licence to release eligible offenders up to 35 days before their prison tenure is due to end, with the provision to extend that further to 60 days if necessary in the future.

Downing Street said the scheme would be temporary but refused to set a deadline for when it would be wound down. Asked how long it could be in place, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman said: “I can’t offer a projection but it is very clearly a temporary measure. It is up to governors to use it operationa­lly, depending on their circumstan­ces.”

 ?? ?? Justice Secretary Alex Chalk
Justice Secretary Alex Chalk

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