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escalating violence in our community
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Sensible Sentencing Trust
(9th July 2007)
Sensible Sentencing legal adviser Stephen Franks today praised the scepticism and concentration of the Youth Parliament members of the Law and Order Select Committee. He presented the Sensible Sentencing Trust’s submission on reform of youth justice.
"I wish the real MPs were as suspicious of the soothing words they get from the criminal justice industry officials. The young people were told that our Youth Justice system is the best in the world, by officials who simply refuse to compare its results with the rest of the world."
"The youth "MP's" seemed disinclined to judge on kind intentions. They wanted to know what the smooth words meant."
"Sensible Sentencing urged the young committee members to compare our current state with the rates that really matter – that is true criminal violence rates before the system became obsessed with ‘curing’ the sickness of individual offenders, instead of deterring most kids from going near crime in the first place."
Sensible Sentencing’s recommendations were as follows:
To: Law and Order Select Committee – Youth Parliament 2007
What should be the focus of New Zealand's Youth Justice System?
Answer: The goal should be exactly the same for every part of the criminal justice system - Minimising crime to protect innocent victims.
To that end it must respect what we now know about criminals. Speed and certainty of consequence can deter more than longer or harsher punishment.
Research shows one psychological measure on which criminals differ characteristically from non-offenders. Offenders have a high risk preference. In ordinary language they are gamblers, they seek out risk. They have high self esteem. They back themselves to beat odds ordinary people would not accept. Uncertainty encourages that gambling drive.
Our modern offender centred criminal justice system could scarcely be better designed to feed offenders’ exaggerated notions of their own luck. At every stage it maximizes uncertainty about the results of offending. The system encourages bets on the chances of:
Research also shows that offending patterns rarely change much once established. Accordingly, speed and certainty of consequence are especially important with entry-level or youth crime, before offenders become hardened. They must believe the law means what it says.
Our youth justice system breaches the first rule of sensible parenting, "don't make idle threats you don't mean to carry out."
Zero tolerance is not zero compassion, or zero forgiveness. Second chances are ok. But not routine 7th, 8th, 9th or 10th chances. And even a second chance should have a cost. The normal social sanction of concern for reputation must be restored by ending automatic name and record suppression. Each apprehended youth offender should know there will be some unwanted consequence, instead of leaving more than 80 percent of apprehensions to go without formal procedure.
All communities are damaged by the weak youth justice system. It shows adults accepting feeble excuses. Criminal patterns are set that few can break as adults. We know that prisons don’t rehabilitate. The system should ensure that only incorrigibles will risk going there.
Regards,
Stephen Franks
Justice Spokesman,
Sensible Sentencing Trust
Mobile : 027 4921983