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Criminal Memoirs: The Daily Mail Test and why the Coroners and Justice Bill is wrong

PrisonBy Andrew Neilson / @neilsonandrew

UPDATE: Director of the Howard League Frances Cook says the Bill is still no good.

Next Wednesday the Coroners and Justice Bill will get a final review in the House of Lords and with it comes a cross-party amendment led by Lord Borrie and the last chance for the legislature to remove a new power enabling the state to confiscate the earnings of former prisoners.

Part 7 of the Coroners and Justice Bill will create a new scheme of Exploitation Proceeds Orders (EPOs), to seize any proceeds an individual may make from describing their criminal experiences. The degree to which the public is offended is the litmus test for seizing the proceeds of any individual.

The Howard League for Penal Reform believes that this Bill represents a threat to both freedom of expression and the reintegration of prisoners into society. It also threatens to punish people twice over, for the most tenuous of purposes.

Under an EPO an individual convicted of a crime will be sentenced to a term in jail and then released. However this new law will grant the state licence to punish again by removing profits connected to artistic expression of their criminal experiences or their time in the penal system.

Not only is a second fiscal penalty disproportionate to and inconsistent with the aims of the penal system, but the additional penalty’s application will be uncertain in defiance of the rule of law.

Rarely has a more uncertain trigger to a criminal sanction been purportedly enshrined in law than ‘the degree to which the public is offended’. We would be better off defining this as the ‘Daily Mail threshold’ from here on in. Individual justice will be replaced by media-fuelled public outrage and former prisoners will become subject not to a rule of law but instead a changeable and malleable political construct masking itself as justice.

The government’s aim in bringing forward this bill is clearly to prevent those who commit crime from glorifying their actions and to "prevent further hurt and distress to the families of the victims of criminal actions". The Howard League for Penal Reform supports such a motive but we do not believe that this part of the Bill will achieve the government’s goals.

It does not prevent publication where no payment has been made, so glorification of crime would still be possible. Further it does not stop the author from getting someone else to publish the work. Equally, there are already rules in place to confiscate excessive criminal proceeds: there are restrictions under the Prison Rules, and also confiscation provisions under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 that can be used to recover any royalties made due to a criminal past.

However, perhaps the most horrifying part of this part of the Bill lies in the detail. The Bill allows the Government to confiscate proceeds even if the crime has been committed abroad, which means that should the British Government ever again find itself supporting an oppressive regime akin to the apartheid regime in South Africa, this legislation would grant it the power to seize assets from a publication written by a UK national imprisoned in that country, provided the individual in question was a national and charged under a terrorism offence akin to one of our own. Indeed it is not hard to imagine that if the current Secretary of State for Wales had travelled to South Africa in his youth the publication of many of his political and campaign pamphlets might have fallen foul of this law.

The legislation also has little or no limitation on who or what counts as a criminal act. Will serial graffiti artists handed an ASBO soon have profits confiscated for photo albums? The Howard League for Penal Reform’s biggest concern is that this law will be wrongly applied, not to serious offenders, but to individuals who are not trying to glorify their acts but trying to achieve contrition through creative expression.

Prisoners who receive a custodial sentence have already served the penalty owed to the state and often some form of artistic expression is essential to their full reintegration back into society. Part 7 of this bill will not act as a bastion of victims’ rights; indeed it will not aid victims’ rights. It will work as an unpredictable and discretionary double punishment which might have been applied to many notable works written in jail, from John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress to Oscar Wilde’s De Profundis, both of which offended a fair share of people at the time but are rightly recognised as classics.

This statute from the Ministry of Justice, on the other hand, should go straight to the remainders pile.

Andrew Neilson is Deputy Director of the Howard League for Penal Reform.

Posted on Oct 14, 2009 at 01:52pm

12 Comments · Show / Hide
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Hi all;

The government have just this second made amendments to this bill but they are no good whatsoever. Read all about them on the Howard League Director's blog. This whole idea should be struck down - all of it...

http://www.howardleague.org/francescrookblog/
Steve Gummer @ 20 weeks and 4 days ago
To think that this could happen under a Labour government... it embarasses me.

Prison has two main purposes aside from public safety:

1) to make it seem as though justice is being done (to satisfy the unwashed masses of the Daily Mail and the Sun); and

2) to reform criminals and turn them into fully functioning members of society.

This ridiculous law firmly shifts the balance in favour of making it appear justice is being done, pandering to an uneducated minority at the expense of peoples' welfare.
King Kong @ 20 weeks and 5 days ago
I completely disagree with you, Andrew, I'm afraid.

This isn't "being punished twice" at all. That's like saying a fraudster is being "punished twice" if prosecuted *and* made to pay back the money he stole. Or like saying a company is punished twice if prosecuted by the HSE *and* made to pay damages to its employees for injuries.

There is no "uncertain trigger" for orders. I think your argument is arguably disingenuous on this point to be honest. Yes, the degree to which the victim, the victim's family and the public are offended are factors to be considered when deciding whether an order should be made. But lots of regulatory systems work like this, with a statutory structure of factors that must be taken into account. Do you say they all violate the rule of law? I'm not an expert in prison and parole law, for instance, but it may well be that parole boards have to take certain matters into account when making their decisions. Do you object to that? Do you object to the victim being given a say?

And public offence is only one of the factors. I don't think you mentioned that the court also has to take into account the cultural and educational value of (for instance) a book written by a prisoner, and the purpose he had in writing it. Should those factors also be ignored?

You say you fear that non-serious offenders will be targeted. Again, the seriousness of the offence is one of the factors to be taken account of in deciding whether to make on order. You don't mention that, I don't think.

As for foreign prisoners - would you prefer that (for instance) people convicted of sex offences abroad be treated differently from those who've done similar things here? That'd be an obvious defect most people would find unfair.

Finally, you're concerned about artistic expression - but obviously this legislation would be subject to the Human Rights Act, and the protection it gives to free expression. If an order would be a disproportionate restriction of artistic or political expression, the court would have no power to make it.

I think the legislation's quite reasonable, and that the factors that are built in are pretty well tailored to distinguish the genuine artistic works and rehabilitative, educative projects you want to see, on the one hand, from objectionable exploitation on the other.
Carl Gardner @ 20 weeks and 5 days ago
English PEN have a briefing on all this:
http://www.englishpen.org/aboutenglishpen/campaigns/criminalmemoirs/
Robert Sharp @ 20 weeks and 5 days ago
Andrew, you are quite right to raise this issue. However, I am not surprised to find this government enacting legislation that will inevitably be struck down by the courts. This government has form for grabbing headlines with petty stunts like this. They will never learn because they put headlines before principles. How depressing...
Paul 'hit or miss as to whether my comments will make it through' Pinfield @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Labourlist

Yes the prisionrs have broke the law but why not help them , Education , mental health and addiction are only the reasons young people are locked up (and adults ) , Its no good having the current policys as it is a reloving door at the moment , Lets use the prison and justice system to find out how we can help them .

Lets not exclude them from socity , I write this as someone convicted of selling cannabis ( when i was younger) , I was scared , My family home had broken down and for 10-12 years i was in care and moved round the southeast and to a foyer , Most young people do this out of fear .

ricki
ricki lake @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
You're right, we could be talking about murderers. Just like we were talking about terrorists when the raft of new anti-terror powers were brought in.

The first time we saw them used was against a pensioner who had the nerve to heckle Jack Straw.
MonkeyBot 5000 @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Oh lets stand up for the criminals why don't we, they have a hard enough time inside afterall. We could be talking about murderers who do a minimum sentence of about eight years i believe,leave jail and use thier new found notoriety for an handsome profit. We seem to get all indignent for all the wrong things, next we'll be out on the street, marching for the poor people inside our prisons not getting their drug rations. What if it was sun readers that were offended, IT WAS US WOT PUT THEM AWAY, such a thing is unthinkable in Murdoch's world. Lets jump down of the table, and save our indignant thoughts for something more worthy.
david mcclarty @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Perhaps I'm confused, but doesn't the Press Complaints Commission's code of practice already stop payment to criminals (and witnesses) in order to prevent them benefiting from exploiting their crimes?
Matthew Cain @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Yet more state-heavy anti-citizen laws from the most statist government in living memory.
Freedom down the tube all the way!

Keep going Ricki 'cos it's not the typos that matter but the point of view you express.
William Silver @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Isn't this the legislation that allows courts/tirals without jurors, just judges?
Road Hog @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Labourlist

Very good piece , It highlights what a bad bill this was (secret coreners) and it highlights how valuable the lords are , It does seem wrong to punish someone twice for the same crime , They should concerntrate on education in prison and drug and alchol addicition and mental health problems this would (i belive) help more than punishing someone twice which alsos doesnt give the prisoner a positive reason to go straight .

ricki, sorry for many typos
ricki lake @ 20 weeks and 6 days ago