
Fewer young offenders are being jailed
Youth prison numbers fall
The number of young people put in custody has fallen
9% in the last year, according to new figures. Courts are increasingly
using new closely supervised community sentences as an alternative to
imprisonment, the figures from the Youth Justice Board's annual review
show.
A total of 4,187 people aged 11-16 were put on the
Intensive Supervision and Surveillance Programme (ISSP) during the last
year. Overall levels of offences stayed roughly the same.
But the number of burglary, robbery and vehicle theft
offences committed by young offenders brought to account in the youth
justice system was lower in the last year than the previous year.
However, levels of fear among young people remained
high, the report said. Over half of young people in school are worried
about being physically assaulted or being the victim of theft, the
report suggests, while a third worry about bullying and racism.
Some 46% of young people in school and 61% of excluded
young people say they have been a victim of crime in the last 12 months.
Two-thirds of young people who have been victims of
crime say the perpetrator of the offence is another young person aged
under 18.
'Encouraging figures'
The Youth Justice Board's annual survey of young people's experience of
offending showed reported offending levels by young people in school has
remained stable since last year — with 26% of young people in school
claiming to have committed at least one offence over the previous 12
months. It has been broadly stable since the first survey in 1999 when
24% reported offending.
The Lord Chief Justice, Lord Woolf welcomed the drop
in young people being put in custody. He said: "It is particularly
encouraging that the policies of the Youth Justice Board are working
effectively and beginning to reduce reoffending.
"Turning away young offenders from crime not only
produces an immediate reduction in crime, it avoids young offenders
becoming adult offenders."
The report comes as a multi-million pound programme of
activities designed to keep thousands of young people out of trouble
during the school holidays is launched.
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