The Guardian Australia

The UK should be ashamed of ‘joint enterprise’ conviction­s. America has put us on notice

- Zoe Williams

The New York Times has just run a shaming investigat­ion into the UK legal principle of “joint enterprise”, under which people can be charged for crimes they were nowhere near.

The report was humiliatin­g for so many reasons, particular­ly if you think of the US as the world leader in locking people up for no reason except racism. Black men in the UK are three times more likely to be prosecuted as groups of four or more – the principal measure of a joint enterprise case – than white men. The energy to protest against it was stifled six years ago, when the supreme court ruled that joint enterprise cases were unfair and racially biased – yet nothing changed.

As the NYT puts it: “Rather than be constraine­d by the ruling, senior prosecutor­s have quietly devised strategies to keep bringing joint enterprise cases and winning conviction­s.”

An untold part of the story is what this does to prisons. I was on the board of a prison charity, the Butler Trust, until this year, but I steered off the subject, as it’s a very establishm­ent organisati­on with Princess Anne as patron, so it was more or less impossible to write about jails without sounding a shade too anarchic. The right amount of anarchy for royally endorsed charities is none.

Yet there was one thing that everyone agreed about, from the most conservati­ve prison governor to the most radical forensic psychologi­st: prison environmen­ts survive on the assumption that everyone inside is guilty. Everything from internal discipline to behaviour management to skills, training, rehabilita­tion and psychologi­cal programmes, everything-relies on this foundation, that prisoners have ended up there justly. How do you deal with a prisoner who is serving time for a crime he was nowhere near?

Sure, you could put him on an anger-management course, but it would have to be bespoke: “How to manage your anger when it’s the totally legitimate response to an unjust process”. The effect, even on people who are in prison fair and square, is corrosive. It shouldn’t take internatio­nal glare to put this back on the agenda, but it would be great if the NYT’s piece did.

Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnist Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publicatio­n in our letters section, please click here.

 ?? ?? ‘How do you deal with a prisoner who is serving time for a crime he was nowhere near?’ Photograph: Jonathan Buckmaster/Alamy
‘How do you deal with a prisoner who is serving time for a crime he was nowhere near?’ Photograph: Jonathan Buckmaster/Alamy

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