By 25th July 2008, the prison population had risen to 83,964. Last
year’s report by Lord Carter Securing the Future: Proposals
for the Efficient and Sustainable Use of Custody in England and
Wales suggests the prison population may well rise to 100,000 within
the next six years and recommends building huge warehouse prisons
– or Titans – to help to contain the extra numbers.
This is a surprising departure from the line he took for years earlier
in Managing Offenders, Changing Lives: A New Approach, when Carter’s
team carefully analysed the reasons the prison population was rising
and proposed a range of measures designed to use sentences more
effectively to assist in reducing reoffending and protecting the
public. This change of heart may reflect the fact that the measures
proposed by Carter, and largely accepted by the government, have
not brought about the seamless end-to-end management of offenders
he expected. Nor have the savings in prison places, which were needed
to pay for the new arrangements been realised.
Anyone
who questions whether we need to be sending quite so many people
to prison risks being labelled soft on crime and being more concerned
with the rights and needs of offenders than the rights and needs
of victims. That is why, while both political parties are only too
happy to say who should go to prison, neither are prepared to say
specifically who should not. We are already living with the consequences
of that abnegation of responsibility, but the costs of it are largely
obscured by spurious claims about the impact of the offences brought
to justice initiative; a focus on the prison population rather than
current sentencing practice; and a failure to consider what impact
resorting to prison so frequently has had on reconviction.

Offences
brought to justice
The
idea that prison numbers are increasing because more offences are
being brought to justice is not supported by the statistics. The
numbers being sentenced fell successively from 1987 to 1995. The
numbers being sentenced in the succeeding years did not reach pre-1995
levels again until 2003 when the total was around 1.5 million. The
numbers then increased in 2004 and 2005 but dropped to pre 2003
levels again in 2006. In simple terms, the rise in the prison population
began at the very point the numbers being sentenced were declining
most sharply; and the prison population is continuing to increase
despite a recent dip in sentenced numbers.
The
lack of connection between the prison population and total numbers
sentenced is not surprising given that most court cases involve
comparatively trivial summary offences. It is more reasonable to
expect the prison population to rise if the number of more serious
(indictable and triable-either-way (TEW)) cases rises. However,
the number of serious cases being sentenced has been relatively
static (varying between 300,000-350,000) throughout most of the
period over which the prison population has grown. The number of
serious cases has even been declining since 2003.
The
sentencing of serious offences has made a large contribution to
the rise in the prison population, mainly because of the length,
rather than the number, of custodial sentences being imposed. The
largest numeric and proportionate increases in the sentencing of
indictable offences occurred in relation to theft and handling.
The number sentenced to custody rose by nearly a third (from 15,637
in 1995 to 20,472 in 2005) even though the overall number sentenced
by the courts for these offences declined from 116,078 to 103,318
(RDS NOMS, 2007b). Given that the average length of sentences imposed
for theft and handling has dropped from 6.3 to 4.3 months over the
same period, it could even be true that those going to prison for
this offence may actually have committed less serious rather than
more serious offences than those sentenced to custody ten years
earlier. Of course these cases do not add very much to the prison
population because they involve such short sentences, but they do
add very significantly to prison receptions and the associated costs.
.
The
offences brought to justice initiative may not have affected the
number being sentenced but it may explain why the proportion of
offenders with ten or more previous convictions coming to court
is increasing, while the proportion of first-time offenders coming
to court is stable. The most likely cause is that the ‘usual
suspects’ are being recycled through the system more quickly
leading them to develop longer records. This is the predictable
– and possibly even intended – consequence of an objective
framed in terms of bringing more offences, rather than more offenders,
to justice.
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The The costs of overusing custody
When reconviction results are used to compare the impact
of prison and probation, statistical modelling is conducted to remove
the effect of differences in the case mix each service is required
to supervise. Recent analyses of ‘modelled’ data have
been used to claim that the effectiveness with which the Prison
and Probation Services supervise offenders is improving. While the
causes of the change cannot be known for certain, it is reasonable
to assume that better supervision has played a part in the fall
in reconviction these analyses demonstrate. However, these modelled
reconviction rates should not be used when assessing the impact
of sentencing behaviour, as the effects they strip out include changes
in the apparent characteristics of offenders which may be a consequence,
rather than a cause, of changes in sentencing behaviour.

While it is laudable that the Prison and Probation Services are
being more effective with those they are sent by the courts, the
bald fact is that, for most of the period that our use of custody
has been increasing, reconviction rates on release have also been
rising. Looking at raw (unmodelled) figures reveals that whereas
53% of those released between 1990 and 1994 were reconvicted within
two years, this had risen to 65% of those released between 2000
and 2004. The most obvious explanation for this increase –
given that there is no evidence that the courts are dealing with
more or more serious cases - is that sentencers are employing custody
less effectively now than they were in the early 1990s. Sending
significantly more minor offenders (e.g. those convicted of theft
and handling and ‘other non-motoring’ offences) to prison
for short periods of time disrupts offenders’ lives, so that
they lose employment and accommodation and contact with support
networks, without providing an opportunity in prison or in the community
for any worthwhile rehabilitative work to be conducted.
In
an age in which the financial cost of giving life-saving drugs to
cancer patients is regarded as a legitimate consideration, it is
surprising that so little public debate centres around whether sending
more people to prison represents a cost-effective way of tacking
crime and reducing re-offending. A recent analysis has assessed
the financial value of the reductions in re-offending associated
with different interventions and the cost of such interventions.
It concluded that the savings to the taxpayer of using a community-based
intervention rather than prison ranged from just over £3,000
to about £88,000, depending on the nature of the community
intervention. When the calculation included the savings resulting
from fewer victim costs, the savings were between £16,000
and £202,000 per offender.
Conclusion
The
only connection efforts to bring more offenders to justice has with
the prison population is that it has increased the proportion of
offenders coming to court with high numbers of previous convictions.
The increased use of custody has been affected by the sentencing
of some serious offences but the biggest change in sentencing behaviour
concerns the number and length of custodial sentences for less serious
property offences and cases which are too trivial (summary only)
to be sent to the Crown Court.
The
fact that modelled reconviction rates show that the Prison Service
is doing a better job is a testament to its hard work, despite increasing
over-crowding. Raw reconviction rates suggest that this is in the
face of custody being used less effectively by the courts. The cost
of the change in sentencing behaviour cannot be measured simply
in terms of extra prison places; the extra reconvictions which have
resulted also carry a cost.
There
are no new easy or quick fixes for constraining or reducing the
size of the prison population. There are even fewer politically
palatable ones. Acting immediately to limit magistrates’ powers
to use custody for non-violent summary offences and specifically
discouraging them from using custody for theft and handling may
not be popular with sentencers. But those convicted of these relatively
minor offences are surely not the offenders the public have in mind
when they call for tougher sentencing, so this does seem like a
worthwhile and viable place to start. Such a move would not solve
prison overcrowding but it would slow down the rate at which it
worsens and help to reduce reconviction rates. It would also save
money not only because prison is an expensive option but because
it is an ineffective response to less serious offending –
as current reconviction rates demonstrate.

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