Man sent back to prison for getting job that started too early in the morning
A prisoner who was released on licence is spending Christmas back in jail after he was punished for taking a job which started at 6.15 in the morning, 45 minutes before his night-time curfew expired. His parole was supervised by a private company, one of 21 put in place in June after the Probation Service stopped having day-to-day supervision of short-term released prisoners.
If anyone ever notices an update I hope it gets posted here.
No doubt Inspector Javert is in on this somewhere.
Jan
Flo said, "No discount for dino!"
Like my now grown little girl used to say to her misbehaving brothers, "I'm tellin'! I'm tellin'!"
Merry Christmas Gulchers.
48 yo man is released from an open prison under parole. (August)
He had to be supervised and wear a tag, and was subject to a night-time curfew.
He looked for work, was given a trial as a driver, then given the job. (September) He bought his own uniform. He had to start at 6:15am but the rules said curfew till 7am - the supervising parole officer said this was ok.
At his next parole interview he was put back in jail for curfew breach.
Comment:
At least in this case the wheels of government may still be turning, by rights he should, eventually, get the ok for the job and an apology, a commendation even, to expect a rethink by the admin people is likely to be a bit much.
Typical government thinking- expecting a man to step out of jail and go into cold storage while the bureaucrats ponder over a decision.
They assume he would be just another long term welfare client, instead he took commendable initiative by finding work.
Rules, procedures, forms, signatures, approvals,schedules, licences, management, signing-off, ... no sense of time, no concept of the needs of the man needing work. This is what Einstein meant when he said 'Never forget your humanity'. An alien concept in the 'public service'.