- offenders at risk of reoffending after drinking face alcohol
bans or restrictions
- up to 12,000 offenders to be tagged over the next three years
to cut booze-fuelled crime which costs society £21 billion a year
- statistics show since the scheme’s rollout that tagged
offenders stuck to their alcohol restrictions 97 percent of time.
Prison leavers will be ordered to wear a sobriety tag, which
monitors alcohol levels in sweat, if their probation officer
thinks they could reoffend when drinking. This will help
probation officers keep a closer eye on offenders’ behaviour and
support them to turn their backs on crime.
Alcohol is believed to play a part in 39 percent of violent crime
in the UK and roughly 20 percent of offenders supervised by the
Probation Service are identified as having drinking
issues. The tags also give offenders the incentive to
break bad habits as breaching the alcohol restrictions could see
them back in prison.
Today’s launch follows the rollout of the scheme in Wales last
year. Figures show that offenders on a tag have stuck to their
alcohol restrictions on 97 percent of time, helping to cut crime
and protecting the public.
Deputy Prime Minister, Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor,
said:
We’ve seen that alcohol tags work - with tagged offenders
complying 97 percent of the time.
That’s why we’re going to double the number wearing them from 900
to 1,900 over the next two years, focusing on those leaving
prison on licence.
This is a big step forward using the latest technology to cut the
link between alcohol abuse and the crime - and make our streets
safer.
Since offenders were first tagged in 2020, they have been used on
over 3,600 criminals in total. The latest statistics showed that
900 offenders were wearing the tag on March 31st, and following
today’s rollout, that number is expected to double by 2024.
Arthur, a 37-year-old from Swansea, turned his chaotic life
around after being ordered to wear an alcohol tag as part of a
community sentence for malicious communication in January 2021.
Arthur said:
Being sober for 6 months helped me keep all my emotions in check.
I thought clearly, it was one of the best things that ever
happened to me.
The tag helped me realise that tomorrow would always be worse if
I drank today with emotions running high.
Probation Minister said:
When I first brought alcohol tags to the UK over a decade ago, I
knew that given the chance, they could have a huge impact on
crime. The great results we have seen so far, and now the
expansion announced this week, mean that the use of tagging
technology is firmly embedded as a critical tool for offender
managers, proving a huge incentive for offenders to change.
The move is part of the government’s plan to cut crime, expanding
the use of innovative technology like tags to protect the public
and drive down reoffending.
In efforts cut reoeffending, last year, the government also
launched a world-first, using GPS tags to track robbers, thieves
and burglars.
In total, an extra £183 million will be invested in electronic
monitoring by 2025 to almost double the number of people tagged
at any one time to approximately 25,000.
Notes to editors
- Recently published statistics showed that offenders complied
with their alcohol ban on 97 percent of the days monitored.
Click to
read the latest MOJ’s Electronic Monitoring statistics.
- An offender’s licence will stipulate that the alcohol tag
must be worn for a minimum of 30 days up to a maximum of 1 year,
with reviews carried out every three months to ensure it is still
necessary, reasonable and proportionate to the risk they pose.
- The amount of time an offender is required to wear the tag is
flexible in that it can be removed and imposed again if deemed
necessary and proportionate to risk.
- Statistics show that around 20 percent of offenders managed
in the community by the Probation Service had an identified
“alcohol need”. Click to
read identified needs of offenders in custody and the
community.
- The Crime Survey indicated that 39% of victims of violent
offences believed that alcohol played a factor in the incident:
https://www.crimesurvey.co.uk.