• Makeitstop@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It’s a life sentence. This is just a rebranded life sentence with the added bonus that those who are paroled stay on parole for life.

    It’s just that it sounds bad when you say someone is getting a life sentence for petty crimes. It sounds a lot nicer when you only mention the minimum jail time they’ll have before being eligible for parole, and justify it as being for everyone’s protection.

    • Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Spacious stated justification aside, they are probably trying to incentivise rehab and good behavior while in prison.

      Decent idea on its face, but it’s all in the execution (ouch)

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    So, to sum up, from 2005 to 2012, the UK had a scheme (always love that word, neutral in most British dialects but delightfully menacing in American English) for certain repeat offenders where you would be sentenced to a minimum with no designated end date, just when the parole board thought you were sufficiently rehabilitated, though you remained on parole indefinitely as well.

    When it was revoked, because “life but with the possibility of parole after two years” is a pretty bizarre idea and a palpably insane sentence for anything short of various homicide sexual assault charges, it was only going forward. They didn’t retroactively cap the prisoners’ sentences.

    Official figures published last week show 2,796 people given IPPs remain in prison today. Of those, 1,179 have never been released and 705 are more than 10 years beyond their original sentence.

    I’m an American. Our system is, on the whole, obviously much worse, tragically worse, but this seems like an oddly Dickensian nightmare in a country that’s generally much more humane, though still struggling with a weird sort of muscularly classist paternalism.

    • witty_username@feddit.nl
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      2 months ago

      […] an oddly Dickensian nightmare in a country that’s generally much more humane, though still struggling with a weird sort of muscularly classist paternalism

      You can add to that a very unhealthy admiration for the USA

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I’ve lived in a couple of countries in Europe including the UK and the idea that the system in Britain is generally humane is pretty naive.

      The Justice System in Britain is to a very large extent a tool to Keep People In Their Proper Place and like the Political system and other Power systems over there, the end result of uninterrupted centuries of maybe the most classist mindset in the whole of Europe and one of the lowest levels of social mobility in the continent.

      Absolutelly, if you are wealthy or well connected the system will be very “humane” for you and if you’re Middle Class you’ll probably be alright. Poor people … well … as long as they only harm other poor people (or foreigners) they might be alright (hence the phenomenon of Hooliganism), otherwise the book will be thrown at them.

      There really is quite the extraordinary “some people are inherently superior to other people” mindset going on in there and that’s reflected in the uneveness of the treatment given to people by the Justice System and the exceedingly cold and extremelly punitive sentencing reserved for “lesser” people.

      The style of violence of the various British Power Systems reflects the style of violence of the Posh Elites: nothing so crude as physical violence involving guns, rather complex rule structures design with enough flexibility to on one side let the “right people” through and on the other crush the “wrong people” in their machinery and a goon-like police force compose of people from a working class background who see themselves as above the common working class and can thus often behave with that very special kind of cruelty and obedience found in those who both think they’re now better than the place from where they came, yet fear they might fall back if they don’t do execute their orders with gusto.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        oddly Dickensian nightmare in a country that’s generally much more humane

        the idea that the system in Britain is generally humane is pretty naive

        You do understand that’s not what he wrote. Right?

        Like, do you get that it was a nightmare system in contrast with a society a little more humane than America? (A bit of a low bar)

        naive

  • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Campaigners have described IPPs as a “death sentence by the back door”. The rate of self-harm among IPP prisoners is more than twice that of the general prison population and there have been 90 self-inflicted deaths of prisoners on IPPs in custody since they were introduced in April 2005, according to the United Group for Reform of IPP. The figures do not include suicides in the community.

    Yeah … it’s a death sentence for many.

    • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, because there’s no light at the end of the tunnel. Indefinite prison sentences means the prisoner has nothing to look forward to once they realize the parole board isn’t going to willingly let them out. At least with absurdly high sentences (like 25 years,) you at least know you’ll be released eventually. Even if the parole board doesn’t agree, you’ll still get out. But when the parole board is your only hope, that means suicide is your only other form of escape.

  • zewm@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m I just dumb or is this title gore?

    I had to read the title several times, comments and article all just to put context to the title.

    • candybrie@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, it’s hard to understand. If they’d written sentenced to 23 months instead of jailed, it would be a lot clearer. As it is, it sounds like he was in jail for 23 months and then “held” somewhere else.

  • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It’s always shocking to me when a like this comes out of a place that isn’t Russia, China, or The US.
    Absolutely abhorrent.

    • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      ^ fewer steps

      The death penalty usually requires silly things like trials and burdens of evidence. With this one simple trick you get straight to the “good” part.

    • MrPibb@lemmynsfw.com
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      2 months ago

      This feels worse somehow. With the death penalty there is a finality to sentencing these people are stuck on an ever speeding treadmill of despair chasing hope likes it’s a carrot on a string. Even if they get out, due to the conditionality of their original sentence, they can be thrown right back in with flick of pen. Like Sisyphus to his boulder these people are bound to sadness perpetually stuck in a state fear.

      • Cosmonauticus@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Don’t ppl on death row not get an official date for their execution? It was my understanding that it can come at anytime unless they’re currently going through appeals. At least in the US but I’m not 100%

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      More like loophole death penalty:

      • These people are pretty much convicted to die in jail but since it’s not officially Death Penalty or even a Life Sentence, the standard of evidence and possibilities of appeal are much lower, the oversight from external actors (such as the Press or Human Rights Organisations) is comparativelly non-existent, as are side effects with international partners (for example, extradition from many European countries to Britain would be much harder or even impossible if they had the Death Penalty or even a Life Sentence).

      This is exactly the kind of way English Politicians and the English Upper Class create rules and pass measures to do pretty cruel things behind a façade which is almost the opposite.

      Just ask the Irish.