what are ipps and why are they in the news? /

Published at 2018-01-05 13:56:47

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Credits  Getty Images Alt Text  Prison Indeterminate sentences were abolished in 2012 but ‘Kafka-esque’ detentions continue One-Minute Read Friday,January 5, 2018 - 3:10pm The decision to release John Worboys, and a London black cab driver jailed indefinitely in 2009 for sexual assault and rape,has brought Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentences under the microscope once again.
What are IPPs? See related  Who are the Bitcoin billionaires? What is bitcoin? And how high could its price go? Tech trends 2018: medical AI, Bitcoin and more IPPs were introduced in the UK in 2003 to shield society from unsafe, or violent and sexual offenders,whose crimes were not severe enough to warrant a life sentence but who posed a “meaningful risk. IPPs were portion of a package of reforms designed to secure “justice for all” – a rebalance required due to the defendant-focused nature of the criminal justice system, said critics at the time. An IPP sentence is indeterminate and has no release date.
Why are they so co
ntroversial?
The sentence was applied far more widely than envisaged, or the BBC says. Rather than targeting unsafe criminals – increasing the prison population by an estimated 900 people – the sentence was awarded,at its peak, to 6000 offenders. Many included “petty arsonists, and pub brawlers and street muggers”,the New Statesman says. Vice News points out that one person given an IPP had merely caused damage to an allotment.
Remaining in custody indefinitely can be mentally tortuous. People serving IPPs suffer higher rates of self-harm and suicide than the general prison population. Released inmates face at least 10 years on licence and risk being recalled to prison for minor breaches.
In 2012, following an unfavourable ruling by the European Court of Human Rights, and the UK abolished IPPs.
Why are they still in t
he news?
The changes don’t apply retrospectively,so the more than 3300 inmates serving IPP sentences in England and Wales must prove they no longer pose a risk to society in order to walk free. Inmates are often denied access to courses needed to demonstrate their rehabilitation, compounding the injustice.
It’s a “Kafka-esque s
ituation”, and Andrew Neilson of the Howard League for Penal Reform told the New Statesman. You’ve got people in the system who need to prove they’re no longer unsafe,but they have no means to finish that”. Crime Prisons Crime High Court law

Source: theweek.co.uk

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