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Prisoner release checks 'put public at risk' - chief inspector | Prisoner release checks 'put public at risk' - chief inspector |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The safety of the public is being put at risk by thousands of prisoners being released without proper assessments, the government has been told. | The safety of the public is being put at risk by thousands of prisoners being released without proper assessments, the government has been told. |
Peter Clarke, the chief inspector of prisons, also found suicides had risen by 15% in a year in England and Wales. | |
In his 2018-19 annual report, Mr Clarke described the rising number of prisoner suicides and self-harm as a "scandal". | In his 2018-19 annual report, Mr Clarke described the rising number of prisoner suicides and self-harm as a "scandal". |
He also found the response to the "deluge of drugs" in prisons had been "too slow" and "unsophisticated". | He also found the response to the "deluge of drugs" in prisons had been "too slow" and "unsophisticated". |
In his report, Mr Clarke said thousands of prisoners who were potentially a "high risk of harm" to the public were being released "without a full risk assessment". | In his report, Mr Clarke said thousands of prisoners who were potentially a "high risk of harm" to the public were being released "without a full risk assessment". |
An inmate's assessment should be regularly updated, he said, but sometimes there was no document at all or the paperwork was out of date. | |
He added that the response to the problem, which had been raised repeatedly, had been "poor". | He added that the response to the problem, which had been raised repeatedly, had been "poor". |
There were 83 suicides in male prisons in 2018-19, an increase from 72 the previous year, the report said. | There were 83 suicides in male prisons in 2018-19, an increase from 72 the previous year, the report said. |
Mr Clarke said levels of self-harm were "disturbingly high", rising in two thirds of the adult male prisons inspected. | Mr Clarke said levels of self-harm were "disturbingly high", rising in two thirds of the adult male prisons inspected. |
He suggested that it was time for an independent inquiry to tackle the "scandal" of people dying in state care in "preventable circumstances". | He suggested that it was time for an independent inquiry to tackle the "scandal" of people dying in state care in "preventable circumstances". |
'Fleas, cockroaches and rodents' | |
Mr Clarke said he would "never forget" the squalid conditions he encountered on a visit to Birmingham prison. | |
He recalled a blood-stained shower, which was littered with rat droppings. | |
Birmingham had the worst examples of living conditions, his report said, with cells "dirty, cramped and overcrowded". | |
Vulnerable prisoners were found living in squalid cells which were not fit for habitation. | |
"Rubbish was left lying around in bags and there were problems with fleas, cockroaches and rodents," the report said. | |
One prisoner lived in a "filthy flooded cell" and the blood of another - who had self-harmed two days earlier - had not been cleaned from the floor. | |
The report warned the "appalling impact" of illicit drugs in prisons had been underestimated. | |
Mr Clarke said there was a "reluctance" to invest in available technology to detect drugs which was a "great shame" given their "destructive impact". | |
The report also found: | |
'Self-harm endemic' | |
Mr Clarke praised the "bravery" of prison staff, saying their work was "difficult, often dangerous, largely unseen by the public and, as a result, little understood". | |
The Ministry of Justice said it had improved its "risk assessment and sentencing planning processes" and high-risk prisoners were subject to "various strict risk assessments". | |
It also said it had improved the provision of mental health support and trained staff on how to care for inmates at risk of self-harm. | |
Deborah Coles, director of charity Inquest, said "self-harm, violence and deaths" were endemic in the prison system and recommendations were "systemically ignored". | |
She called for urgent action to reduce the use of prison, redirect resources into community alternatives and "hold those involved legally accountable for deaths across all state institutions". |