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Working with dangerous offenders: What is achievable?

Working with dangerous offenders: What is achievable?. Andrew Bridges HM Chief Inspector of Probation. Four purposes of offender management:. Punish. Help. Effective Offender Management. Change. Control. Four purposes of offender management:. Punish. Help. Change. Control.

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Working with dangerous offenders: What is achievable?

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  1. Working with dangerous offenders:What is achievable? Andrew Bridges HM Chief Inspector of Probation

  2. Four purposes of offender management: Punish Help EffectiveOffenderManagement Change Control

  3. Four purposes of offender management: Punish Help Change Control

  4. Four purposes of offender management: Punish Help Change Control

  5. Context: Public expectations

  6. Not achieving success? • Statistically, Serious Further Offences are committed by c0.5% of those under supervision overall, and c0.5% of those under MAPPA (Multi-Agency Public Protectn) • But that’s still c250 individual nasty offences per year, c100 of which are the most serious: murder, rape etc – each of which is a dreadful personal tragedy • Hence, despite the statistics, each individual case we hear about publicly is experienced as a failure, and a symptom of a failing service.

  7. Who are ‘dangerous offenders’? “Dangerous”? All the other offenders (?) Is itlike this? Or like this?

  8. Committing Serious Further Offences: The c7% of offenders assessed as High or V High Risk of Harm (RoH)commit c20% of SFOs c7% c80% of SFOs committed by Med/Low RoH

  9. Assessment: Actuarial & individual • HMI Probation very critical about failures to take proper notice of actuarial information • Strong reaction in some quarters (esp prisoners) to this renewed emphasis on actuarial • Poor understanding of relationship between actuarial and individual assessment? Some much more risky than others, but always complex

  10. Actuarial: Like insurance … Turning individual complexity into categories of risk But not completely like insurance …

  11. Individual assessment • Managing offenders: If 7 out of 10 offenders in this category will reoffend you must assess: • i) Whether he will be one of the 7 who does, or one of the 3 who does not reoffend, and … • ii) …What actions you can plan, and make sure they happen, that make this individual more likely to be one of the 3 that succeeds. • Insurance: If you are 70% likely to crash your car, the company will (perhaps) set a huge premium, but then it’s up to you to ‘stay out of trouble’ Scientific, but it is not an exact science

  12. Interventions: Remembering the restrictive interventions • Yes, do the constructive interventions … • … But failures on the restrictive interventions are where staff are left most exposed • Needed: Constant vigilance to RoH issues, alertness and an investigative approach, sharing information with others • Responsiveness to new information, with action to keep to a minimum the offender’s Risk of Harm to others

  13. Outcomes: What is achievable? In prison,locked up Not in prison,NOT locked up, can do good - - or ill 80-90% control over life? 5 - 10% control over life? Kemshall’s principles of defensible decision-making? [Hindsight in advance]How would it look to anInspector later, if the worst were to happen tomorrow?

  14. Summary of what is achievable: • Assessment stage: Identify what is the RoH to others, and what you plan to do to keep to a minimum that offender’s RoH to others • Interventions: Take action as planned, and in response to changing circumstances, to keep to a minimum that offender’s RoH to others • Outcomes: Should a SFO happen, as it will from time to time, you can demonstrate that you took all reasonable action to keep to a minimum that offender’s RoH to others To summarise the summary ….

  15. “…Take all reasonable action to keep to a minimum each offender’s Risk of Harm to others…” i.e. “Doing the job properly”

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