More
madness from lunatic Britain...
One murder and one rape every week by
prisoners freed early
Criminals on probation are
committing one murder and one rape every week, the Ministry of Justice
has revealed.
In the past two years offenders on
licence have been convicted of 105 rapes along with 94 murders, 18
attempted murders and 39 manslaughters.
A report also shows that
there were 78 kidnappings, 43 convictions for arson with intent to
endanger life and 657 other violent or sexual offences punished by a
maximum jail sentence of ten years or more.
Vistim: French student Lauranet
Bonomo was brutally murdered by Dano Sonnex after he was freed on
probation
The total number of convictions for
criminals being monitored by probation staff in the two years to March
2009 was 1,394, or almost two per day. The vast majority of these
- 1,034 - were classified as serious offences.
On top of this, last year there
were 429 criminals awaiting trial for offences committed while on
probation, compared to 57 the year before.
Shadow Justice Secretary Dominic
Grieve said last night: 'The public will be shocked to learn that
dangerous criminals under diluted probation supervision are convicted
of one murder a week.
'Gordon Brown has released
serious offenders early and relaxed the monitoring of those on
probation.
Killer: Daniel Sonnex was found
guilty last month of the murders of two French students in London while
on probation
'This is further evidence that the
Government's lax approach to criminal justice is putting the public at
risk.'
The figures apply to criminals
released from jail on licence or on probation while serving a community
sentence.
Probation arrangements are under
scrutiny following a series of high-profile killings by prisoners
released on licence and supposedly being closely supervised in the
community.
In June Dano Sonnex was jailed for
torturing and killing French students Laurent Bonomo and Gabriel Ferez
in an 'orgy of bloodletting' while on probation.
The serial offender and psychopath
was wrongly classified as 'medium risk' by probation staff when he was
freed half way through an eight-year jail term.
David Scott, who quit as head of
London Probation over the blunders that led to the murders, later
warned that problems with staff numbers, training and management meant
the risk of a similar tragedy remained. He adding that many probation
officers were ' overwhelmed' by their workload.
Other cases include that of
knife-obsessed Gary Chester-Nash, who had more than 30 convictions and
a long history of violence and threats to women when he walked free
from prison in 2006.
He travelled to Cornwall and
stabbed 59-year-old Jean Bowditch to death after breaking into the
seaside bungalow she was cleaning.
Shocking: knife-obsessed Gary
Chester-Nash stabbed a women to death after walking free from prison
Official reports later highlighted
'inadequate performance' by probation officials and voiced particular
concerns over sub-standard 'risk of harm' assessments used to gauge the
threat from the most dangerous criminals.
Yesterday Justice Minister Claire
Ward said: 'The number of serious further offence convictions by all
offenders supervised by the Probation Service was around 0.3 per cent
last year.
'While every such crime is a matter
of great regret, this figure is a tribute to the hard work and
dedication of probation officers.
'The vast majority of serious
further offences are committed by offenders given a community order by
the court having been convicted of less serious offences.
'In most cases, nothing in
their previous offending histories has indicated that they would be
capable of such serious offences.'
BPP COMMENT: 