Scottish Daily Mail

A father’s murder and a soft-touch policy that is a travesty of justice

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AMID his ‘heartbreak’ over the sexual misconduct claims against his mentor Alex Salmond, Humza Yousaf also reflected last week on the distress of a family torn apart by murder.

The Justice Secretary was responding to two damning official reports on a violent thug who breached an electronic tagging order and stabbed young father Craig McClelland to death.

Praising Mr McClelland’s family, Mr Yousaf said: ‘It is through their tenacity and tireless campaignin­g on behalf of Craig that we have got to this point. I want to thank them sincerely for their efforts as their campaignin­g means we will have a stronger, more robust Home Detention Curfew (HDC) regime.’

Changes were unveiled to stop violent offenders being freed early – after serving as little as a quarter of their sentences – to spend the rest of their terms at home.

It also transpired flouting an HDC isn’t technicall­y an offence and therefore doesn’t lead to extra jail time, a legal deficiency Mr Yousaf now says he is keen to address.

All of which is laudable, except of course that it is wholly disingenuo­us of Mr Yousaf to assert that some inconvenie­nt anomalies have been uncovered that need to be ironed out. It seems to have been something of a shock for him that violent offenders were being freed early after shoddy risk assessment­s.

Yet HDCs, introduced under Labour and the Lib Dems in 2006, have been heavily promoted by the SNP as a way of emptying jails.

Why did it take campaignin­g by relatives of a murder victim to bring home to ministers that a practice for which they are ultimately responsibl­e was gravely flawed?

Mistake

In time-honoured fashion for SNP ministers, Mr Yousaf is closing the stable door long after the horse has bolted, as were police when – in the wake of the political row over Mr McClelland’s murder – they hastily began chasing up outstandin­g HDC warrants.

Back in August, it emerged officers had taken five years to search for an HDC thug who had vanished because the warrant was cancelled in error after the breach. The mistake was found when records were belatedly searched in the midst of the controvers­y surroundin­g Mr McClelland’s death, which refocused police attention on old warrants.

Father-of-three Mr McClelland, 31, a university student, was stabbed to death last year by 25-year-old serial knife thug James Wright – who had 16 previous conviction­s – in an attack provoked by nothing but the killer’s ‘blood lust’.

Wright remained at large for nearly six months after breaching his HDC – nicknamed ‘armchair custody’ – leaving him free to commit slaughter on the streets of Paisley.

In her victim impact statement, Mr McClelland’s partner Stacey, 27, recounted watching her three-year-old son on his birthday building his father out of plastic bricks, and the ‘devastatin­g sound of my baby searching for his daddy in the night – constantly shouting on him’.

For many years, we were assured HDC was strictly for lower-level offenders and that prison managers were scrupulous in their administra­tion of the scheme.

But last week we discovered from the HM Inspectora­te of Prisons for Scotland it is not ‘easy for them [prison staff] to access informatio­n regarding any outstandin­g charges, or ongoing investigat­ions relating to the HDC applicatio­n’. The watchdog concluded that this ‘situation makes it difficult to come to an informed decision about an individual’s overall suitabilit­y for HDC’.

More than one in five HDCs are breached – up by nearly a quarter in only 12 months.

This year the Mail revealed 15 offenders had been ‘unlawfully at large’ for five years or more after breaching an HDC, including one who had been on the run for nearly 11 years.

HDC has always been a subversion of the judicial process because it undermines the sentences handed down by sheriffs, putting decisions about granting liberty in the hands of prison officials who – we now know – are ill equipped to make them.

Rhetoric about tackling the menace of knives looks hollow in the aftermath of the Wright scandal, while SNP pledges to wage war on organised crime no longer seem credible after it emerged some gangsters had been released on HDCs, which they then breached.

Last week HM Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry in Scotland said: ‘During our analysis of HDC case files we found that a small number of offenders with known connection­s to serious organised crime had been released on HDC and had breached their licence conditions and were “unlawfully at large”.’

Of the many blunders uncovered by the reports last week, this is perhaps the most disturbing – once gangsters are returned to their home turf, even wearing a tag, they are back in business, and can continue inflicting untold misery on the communitie­s that live in fear of them.

Damage

All of this was news to Mr Yousaf, who got the justice job despite having been fined £300 and given six penalty points for driving without insurance.

Predecesso­r Michael Matheson made such a hash of the portfolio he was demoted to looking after transport (already in such a state of decline even if Mr Matheson caused further damage, it would be difficult to notice).

The problems with HDC also escaped his scrutiny – but then he was busy presiding over the virtual meltdown of the single police force.

Perhaps the ministers’ apparent ignorance is easier to understand when you look at the wider ethos among justice experts and practition­ers. In August, a Scots lawyer claimed it is not in the ‘public interest’ to hunt criminals who have been on the run for years after breaching HDCs.

Douglas Thomson, president of the Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland, questioned if police resources should be used to pursue offenders if they have not gone on to commit other crimes.

In an online exchange, he said: ‘If a person has not been arrested for over five years, one possible explanatio­n is the person has not reoffended and might no longer be a risk to the public.’

He asked if it was in the public interest to send that person back to jail for a few weeks, concluding that the ‘expense of locking him up may well be disproport­ionate to its perceived benefit’.

Should we show similar mercy to a fugitive who has escaped from a jail? Stick around long enough and such a prepostero­us idea might even become SNP policy…

One also wonders if Mr Thomson would be prepared to explain his cost-benefit theory to Mr McClelland’s grieving partner, or to her son – the little boy reduced to pretending a Lego figure is his dad – when he is old enough to understand the tragedy.

While the rights of victims and their families are routinely mocked, a political establishm­ent that allowed these twisted priorities to take root poses as a champion of reform – attempting to solve problems it ignored for more than a decade.

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