(EMBARGOED until 17.00 hours, 12 May 2005)
12 May 2005
Lord Chief Justice Calls for Greater Sense on Sentencing
Lord Woolf, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, called today for a range of measures to make greater sense of sentencing – in order to improve public confidence and make the criminal justice system more effective.
“We need to make greater sense of sentencing, so that it achieves all the things which it is designed to do: that it punishes offenders and protects the public; that it reduces and deters crime; that it makes offenders make reparations to those affected by their crimes; and that it reforms and rehabilitates offenders.”
Lord Woolf’s comments came during the Leon Radzinowicz lecture, which he gave at Cambridge University this evening. He concluded his speech with a recipe for achieving this goal:
The Lord Chief Justice pointed to a number of factors that were pre-requisites for these measures to succeed.
One element is restraint on legislation on sentencing, to allow the criminal justice system to concentrate its efforts on making existing reforms work to the fullest extent.
Lord Woolf also emphasised the need for resources to be available at each stage of the Criminal Justice process, so that there was investment in preventing re-offending and rehabilitation as well as in detecting and deterring crime.
He also commented on the need to bridge the gap between public perceptions of the severity of sentencing and the more severe sentences in fact imposed.
“14 years ago the prison population was 42,000 and falling, while today it is 76,000 and forecast to rise. This is apparently wholly contradictory to public perceptions who believe that courts are unduly lenient.
“What perhaps should come as a shock to the public is how unsuccessful we have been at preventing reoffending. The cost of re-offending by ex-prisoners is £11 billion per year and the incidence of reoffending after the completion of a sentence is at an unacceptably high level.”
The Lord Chief Justice also emphasised that prison overcrowding meant inmates were less able to earn reasonable sums from paid employment or pursue educational courses. This reduced their ability to pay compensation to victims of crime or to turn away from re-offending.
“If an offender is returned to society at the end of his sentence with increased skills, a job to go to and accommodation, the risk of that offender re-offending is significantly reduced.”
Lord Woolf stressed that the prospects of breaking the cycle of reoffending were better now because of a number of improvements that has taken place:
Notes for Editors
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