Landmark sentencing reforms to ensure prisons never run out of space again
Landmark reforms that will end the prison crisis the Government
inherited, which threatens the complete breakdown of law and order
on Britain's streets, have been announced by the Lord Chancellor,
Shabana Mahmood. The sweeping review, published today by
former Justice Secretary David Gauke, recommends comprehensively
overhaul sentencing – ensuring jails never run out of space again
and dangerous offenders can be kept off the streets. The majority
of the...Request free trial
Landmark reforms that will end the prison crisis the Government inherited, which threatens the complete breakdown of law and order on Britain's streets, have been announced by the Lord Chancellor, Shabana Mahmood. The sweeping review, published today by former Justice Secretary David Gauke, recommends comprehensively overhaul sentencing – ensuring jails never run out of space again and dangerous offenders can be kept off the streets. The majority of the recommendations have been accepted today in principle – with a Sentencing Bill due in the coming months. The reforms will put public protection and cutting crime at the heart of the justice system and ensure the public is never put at risk again from the threat of prisons running out of space and police unable to make arrests. In the past 14 years just 500 places were added to the prison estate, despite the prison population nearly doubling over the last 30 years. To put an end to this crisis, the Government confirmed plans last week to invest £4.7 billion more in prison building, putting the Government on track to open 14,000 places by 2031. It will be the largest prison expansion since the Victorian era, and 2,400 places have already been opened since July 2024. Despite this unprecedented construction, the prison population is soaring – with the latest projections showing the country's jails will be bust within months and 9,500 places short by early 2028 without further action. The Government is taking the decisive action needed so we can protect the public and never allow the country to face the breakdown of our justice system again. Making the case before Parliament today, the Lord Chancellor said: “Our prisons are, once again, running out of space and it is vital that the implications are understood. If our prisons collapse, courts are forced to suspend trials, the police must halt their arrests. Crime goes unpunished, criminals run amok and chaos reigns. We face the breakdown of law and order in this country. “The prison population is now rising by 3,000 each year and we are heading back towards zero capacity. It now falls to this Government to end this cycle of crisis. That starts by building prisons….This investment is necessary but not sufficient. We cannot build our way out of this crisis. Despite building as quickly as we can, demand for places will outstrip supply by 9,500 in early 2028.” Reforms accepted today will once and for all put prisons on a sustainable footing while protecting the public from dangerous criminals. One key change will be a new “earned progression model” that will see prisoners earn their way to release through good behaviour or face longer in jail. There will be no automatic release for prisoners who misbehave. The changes mean:
While David Gauke has suggested maximums of 50 and 67 percent in custody, respectively, for these sentences, the Government has decided not to impose these. In addition, the Government has rejected the review's recommendation to cut the minimum prison term for extended determinate sentences to 50%. The serious violent and sexual offenders serving these sentences will have to serve at least two-thirds of their sentence and their release will continue to be down to the Parole Board. To enforce this approach, the Government will introduce a tougher adjudication regime so that bad behaviour in prisons is properly punished. When released, offenders will enter a new period of “intensive supervision” which will see tens of thousands more offenders tagged and many more placed under home detention. To support the Probation Service, the Government will significantly increase its funding – by around 45% by the final year of the spending review period. This means the annual budget of around £1.6 billion today will rise by up to £700m by 2028/29. Other major changes include:
The Government will expand tough punishments outside jail to force offenders to pay back the victims and communities they have harmed. This includes:
The Justice Secretary will also go further than the Review's recommendations:
The Lord Chancellor added: ”When discussing sentencing, it is too easy to focus on how we punish offenders when we should talk more about victims. Everything I am announcing today is in pursuit of a justice system that serves victims. “If our prisons collapse, it is victims who pay the price and by cutting reoffending, we will have fewer victims in future.” As part of the Government's safer streets mission and to make sure victims see justice done, the Lord Chancellor has also accepted recommendations to:
Currently offenders can be given exclusion zones, preventing offenders from entering areas their victims might be. Going beyond the Review's recommendations, the Government will explore changes so some offenders are instead locked into specific ‘restriction zones' monitored by GPS tags so victims can feel safe everywhere else. |