The Wookiee
Back From The Dead
4 November 2006
22 RAPISTS LET OFF WITH A CAUTION
By Oonagh Blackman
A SHOCK rise in the use of cautions has let 22 RAPISTS walk free with slapped wrists.
The number of violent thugs ticked off went up 17 per cent to 183,000 last year, alarming Home Office figures revealed yesterday.
Sex offenders, robbers and violent criminals were among those set free with a police caution rather than face trial.
Tory David Davis laid into Home Secretary John Reid as he blamed the Government's failure to build more prisons on the fiasco and branded it an "insult to the victims of crime".
He added: "It is bad enough so many people suffer from soaring violent crime. It is outrageous so many people get away with it.
"This is a consequence of Labour's failure to address the lack of capacity in prisons, meaning people who should be in jail are not."
The Home Office figures revealed 299,000 offenders were given a caution in 2005 - a 17 per cent jump on the previous year.
And 51,000 violent crooks were let off with a caution, a rise of 39 per cent.
The Government sparked more fury yesterday with plans for young criminals to serve time in children's homes instead of jail.
Lib Dem Nick Clegg said: "Overcrowded prisons must not be allowed to turn children's homes from refuges into semi-penal institutions."
And Labour MP George Howarth called for more police to tackle organised crime after claiming parts of Merseyside are "controlled by gangsters". He added: "They determine who can live where...what time you can walk the streets and control shops."
Discuss
22 RAPISTS LET OFF WITH A CAUTION
By Oonagh Blackman
A SHOCK rise in the use of cautions has let 22 RAPISTS walk free with slapped wrists.
The number of violent thugs ticked off went up 17 per cent to 183,000 last year, alarming Home Office figures revealed yesterday.
Sex offenders, robbers and violent criminals were among those set free with a police caution rather than face trial.
Tory David Davis laid into Home Secretary John Reid as he blamed the Government's failure to build more prisons on the fiasco and branded it an "insult to the victims of crime".
He added: "It is bad enough so many people suffer from soaring violent crime. It is outrageous so many people get away with it.
"This is a consequence of Labour's failure to address the lack of capacity in prisons, meaning people who should be in jail are not."
The Home Office figures revealed 299,000 offenders were given a caution in 2005 - a 17 per cent jump on the previous year.
And 51,000 violent crooks were let off with a caution, a rise of 39 per cent.
The Government sparked more fury yesterday with plans for young criminals to serve time in children's homes instead of jail.
Lib Dem Nick Clegg said: "Overcrowded prisons must not be allowed to turn children's homes from refuges into semi-penal institutions."
And Labour MP George Howarth called for more police to tackle organised crime after claiming parts of Merseyside are "controlled by gangsters". He added: "They determine who can live where...what time you can walk the streets and control shops."
Discuss