28/05/2004

Blunkett slammed over offenders tracking proposals

The Tories have slammed David Blunkett as a "man without ideas" after the Home Secretary unveiled plans to step up the use of electronic tagging, satellite tracking and lie detectors in an attempt to keep track of sex offenders released from jail.

Mr Blunkett said today the police and probation officers would use the technology to track convicts given community sentences or released on licence, while lie detectors would ensure that offenders kept to their release conditions.

However, Shadow Home Secretary David Davis said that there may be "sensible reasons" for tagging, but tagged prisoners should not be let out of jail earlier, "simply to free up space in our overcrowded prisons".

He added: "This decision by the Home Secretary is a last minute response from a man who has run out of ideas and whose prisons are at crisis point. What kind of message does this send out to criminals as well as the victims of crime?"

Criticising Mr Blunkett for failing to build new prisons when existing institutions are "absolutely full", Mr Davis added: "It is right to look at lie detector tests and electronic tagging, but technology is never fool-proof and should not be used just to ease the pressure on our prisons. The risks should be looked at closely and public safety must always remain our number one priority."

Commenting on the government’s plans, Lib Dem Shadow Home Affairs Secretary Mark Oaten said: "We support the use of tagging and satellite tracking as a sensible use of technology which will reassure the public.

"The use of lie detectors is more problematic, and the LDs will need further convincing that the technology is safe and reliable."

(gmcg)

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