Simon Reevell: We can't cut crime rates by putting more people in prison

In 1910, a 35-year old Liberal MP by the name of Winston Churchill was made Home Secretary. One of his first acts in the new job was to announce that within 12 months he would reduce the number of prisoners incarcerated for petty offences by 50,000.

He told the Commons that he was doing this because one of the main principles of prison reform "should be to prevent as many people as possible from getting there at all." The reaction of the Press to this new policy was negative. Churchill was accused of being soft on crime, of caring more for the welfare of the petty criminal than the law-abiding public.

Three months ago the new Justice Secretary, Kenneth Clarke, made a speech in which he argued that there were too many people being held behind bars. He said that when he was Home Secretary in the early 1990s, the number of prisoners stood at about the 44,000 mark. Today, that number had increased to more than 85,000. Clarke told us that more than 60 per cent of prisoners are serving less than six month sentences because of the minor nature of the offences they had committed. He suggested that not all but many of these might be better off serving community sentences instead.

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