Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Fair Sentence?
29 Answers
With a string on convictions for violence is society the right place for her try "turn her life around" or would a secure mental institution or prison be more appropriate and safer for the public?
Media URL: http://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/11402087.Woman_with__breathtaking__record_of_violence_escapes_jail
Description:
Description:
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Brancaster. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The NHS Mental Health Service has been virtually annihilated in the recent cost cutting moves. It no longer exists to any meaningful extent.
So the only other option was prison , in prison she would have mixed with other violent prisoners and in all probability got worse. Women's jails are notorious for being worse than men's jails for violence as only the very worst case's end up there.
So the only other option was prison , in prison she would have mixed with other violent prisoners and in all probability got worse. Women's jails are notorious for being worse than men's jails for violence as only the very worst case's end up there.
She deserves to be inside and for quite a stretch.
1. Because she deserves to be.
2. She'll get all the help and treatment she needs inside, whereas she'd ironically struggle to avail herself of such services whilst remaining free.
How did she get/retain a job as an estate agent? As her boss I'd be wary of letting her loose with clients in an uncontrolled environment!
1. Because she deserves to be.
2. She'll get all the help and treatment she needs inside, whereas she'd ironically struggle to avail herself of such services whilst remaining free.
How did she get/retain a job as an estate agent? As her boss I'd be wary of letting her loose with clients in an uncontrolled environment!
Dam savage should be in jail for the good of the public. The sad thing is If I did that I'd go straight down most probably. Quite breathtaking, perhaps M'Lud needs to get out into the real world on occasion, 18 offences of violence and she still isn't in jail. Eddie, what has the NHS got to do with the price of eggs? Violent multiple offender should in any civilised society = jail, end of.
It is significant that she had 'sought help from the mental health service' before this offence but was still waiting for assessment.
That is probably the reason the judge thought himself able to suspend the sentence.If you read the link the judge was uneasy about this and warned her that just one breach of the sentence would result in her being immediately sent to prison. Obviously 'estate agent' is not one of the jobs where a CRB check is necessary despite the fact that she could have unsupervised contact with vulnerable people ( the elderly for example), a CRB check would have shown up her violent past and precluded her getting such a job.
She will lose her job now though and be virtually unemployable.
That is probably the reason the judge thought himself able to suspend the sentence.If you read the link the judge was uneasy about this and warned her that just one breach of the sentence would result in her being immediately sent to prison. Obviously 'estate agent' is not one of the jobs where a CRB check is necessary despite the fact that she could have unsupervised contact with vulnerable people ( the elderly for example), a CRB check would have shown up her violent past and precluded her getting such a job.
She will lose her job now though and be virtually unemployable.
Strange then that they appear to have access to Mental Health Services here:
http:// www.goo gle.co. uk/url? sa=t&am p;rct=j &q= &es rc=s&am p;sourc e=web&a mp;cd=2 &ve d=0CC0Q FjAB&am p;url=h ttp%3A% 2F%2Fww w.rethi nk.org% 2Fresou rces%2F h%2Fhea lthcare -in-pri son-fac tsheet& amp;ei= v0bqU77 mE8qs0Q WP94GgA Q&u sg=AFQj CNG8lJf OMGX7De QGJ7x21 QWownNE zA& sig2=Pj xwRGcDB QhRod9l 8cxXXA& amp;bvm =bv.726 76100,d .bGQ
If they don't I've no doubt a lawyer/ECHR representative would be all over the Prison Service like a pigeon on a chip. I'm sure if she tried hard enough whilst inside she'd get the access to the services she supposedly needs.
http://
If they don't I've no doubt a lawyer/ECHR representative would be all over the Prison Service like a pigeon on a chip. I'm sure if she tried hard enough whilst inside she'd get the access to the services she supposedly needs.
a CRB check would have shown up her violent past and precluded her getting such a job.
She will lose her job now though and be virtually unemployable.
-------------------
Again, as a former prisoner, as is the way upon release I'm sure under some rehabilitation scheme she'd soon get a job again.
This link is 6 years old but I'm sure that matters at present are not very dissimilar:
http:// www.tel egraph. co.uk/n ews/ukn ews/246 4498/Mo re-spen t-on-fo od-for- prisone rs-than -for-NH S-patie nts.htm l
She will lose her job now though and be virtually unemployable.
-------------------
Again, as a former prisoner, as is the way upon release I'm sure under some rehabilitation scheme she'd soon get a job again.
This link is 6 years old but I'm sure that matters at present are not very dissimilar:
http://