Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Pubdate: Mon, 28 Sep 1998 Author: Ian Bruce MAKING POVERTY A CRIME You don't have to be a danger to society to be sent to prison, says Ian Bruce. Failing to make ends meet can put you there as well JANET committed a crime apparently so serious and threatening to society that the court had little option but to send her to Cornton Vale, Scotland's notorious and suicide-plagued women's prison. The cause? A bald tyre. The sentence? Seven days. The 33-year-old Glaswegian, a first-time offender owed the State UKP46, a debt that was to cost her a week of her life, her livelihood and her self-respect. In 1995, Janet had been working as a private-hire taxi driver when she was involved in a minor collision with another vehicle. Although cleared of any blame for the accident, routine police checks revealed that one of her tyres was worn, for which she was handed a UKP40 fine and three penalty points on her licence. She should have paid the financial penalty, but she didn't. As the legal process rolled on, she was given the opportunity to pay the fine off in instalments of UKP5. She defaulted on those payments as well. Janet admits she was stupid, but is still devastated by the way the full force of the law was unleashed upon her. One day the police arrived at her house to serve a warrant for her arrest for non-payment. Despite the minor nature of her offence (and, ironically the fact that at the moment of her apprehension she had more than enough to cover the outstanding sum in her pocket), Janet spent the weekend that followed in police custody. Whenever she left her cell, she did so under escort, shackled with a pair of heavy, chafing handcuffs. After sentencing, the by-now terrified woman was driven to Cornton Vale in a bus full of other freshly sentenced women, many of them beginning longer-term periods of incarceration for serious offences. The usual admissions procedure followed. A process in which the bewildered woman was roughly stripped, searched and showered before being thrown in with the rest of the prison population. She claims that at this point, she was immediately surrounded by hardened inmates looking for drugs, money or anything else of value they could get. As the realisation broke that she was alone in an alien environment with nobody she could turn to, Janet cried herself to sleep. Joanne O'Reilly and Yvonne Gilmour, women who were to become famous as the third and sixth inmates of the women's prison to commit suicide in the last two years, were in the jail at the time. "I knew them and I had an idea of what they were going through," says Janet. "There were girls in there who had only been around for a matter of weeks before they had been bullied into becoming somebody's gay lover. It was more or less rape. I can only thank God that the experience didn't affect me like it did them because it so easily could have. The very thought of it makes my blood run cold. It's something I don't think I could ever forget." When you meet Janet, a shy, respectable little woman with about as much hardness and guile in her as Squirrel Nutkin, it is scarcely believable that a court could have condemned her to a prison sentence over a sum less than the price of a week's groceries. However, hers is not an unusual case. According to the latest Scottish Office figures, each year around 9,000 Scots are sent to prison for non-payment of fines. On average, they will serve an 11-day sentence because they owe the system UKP256. Almost 500 will begin their jail terms owing less than UKP50, over half are young people aged less than 30 and, unbelievably, 52 per cent of the entire female prison population are there because they failed to pay minor court fines. While accepting that there must always be a reasonable punishment available to reprimand those who break the law. many members of the legal establishment argue that hundreds of Scots will go to prison this year because they are simply too poor to pay the fines levied upon them. Gerry Brown, former chairman of the Scottish Law Society's Criminal Law Committee, is deeply concerned by a trend which seems to be making poverty a crime: "It must be recognised that fines are often imposed without any reference to the accused's finances or their ability to pay. Thousands of people are being criminalised for petty, victimless offences." Certainly, there seems to be a litany of cases where Scotland's poor are being punished heavily for their position at the bottom of the economic heap. Angela, a 28-year-old Edinburgh woman, was living on benefits in 1997 and felt unable to pay her television licence. A fine of UKP300 was imposed which, naturally enough, she couldn't afford to pay either. A seven-day sentence followed. Similarly, Anne, 31, a mother of two from Glasgow, was caught shoplifting toiletries for her family in the same year. Living on benefits and unable to pay for her own sanitary towels, it came as no surprise when she subsequently failed to pay the UKP200 penalty levied, and her husband was forced to quit his low-paid job to look after their children when she spent ten days in Cornton Vale. The couple remain unemployed and in debt to this day. On average, the cost to the prison system of jailing fine defaulters amounts to UKP800 for each one. In special circumstances it can cost even more: Gerry, a 40-year-old haemophiliac from Paisley, failed to pay a UKP150 fine for breach of the peace. Due to his medical condition, the recovering alcoholic had to be taken to hospital under police escort on each of his five days of imprisonment - the enormous cost of which was met by the taxpayer. In response to growing concerns over an increasingly inappropriate situation, Scottish Office Prisons Minister Henry McLeish last year announced a wide-ranging review of the alternative options to imprisonment for such petty offenders, the result of which was a consultation document on community sentencing published last week. Chief among the solutions put forward is the Supervised Attendance Order (SAO), a sentencing currently being phased in that affords courts the opportunity to impose a compulsory period of up to 100 hours in a community education, training or work programme for individuals defaulting on a fine of less than UKP500. Currently only available as a punishment for those who have already failed to pay fines, the document suggests SAOs could be expanded to allow courts to dispense such orders as a first instance sentence, a move which could take account of those unable to pay any kind of fiscal penalty. Keith Simpson, senior manager at the ex-prisoners' association SACRO, broadly welcomes the Scottish Office moves to remove from the prison system the large numbers of offenders he believes provide no threat to society: "Incarcerating fine-defaulters does nothing to protect the public and only makes it more likely that they will re- offend." That would certainly tally with Janet's experience. Her prison record has severely complicated regaining her taxi driver's permit and, she fears, scuppered her chances of finding other employment: "I panic whenever an application form or an interviewer asks me about my criminal record. My offence may have been a silly little thing, but I've still been there -I'm still an ex-con." She would also agree that the chances of a petty offender getting into serious crime are greatly increased following a prison sentence. Despite serving only seven days - during which she says she kept a very low profile - Janet claims that she could not avoid gaining an eavesdropped education in drug dealing, prostitution, fraud and theft. While Janet and the campaigners who fight causes such as hers welcome Henry McLeish's latest initiative, they point out that, so far, this is only a consultation document, and any results are unlikely to become concrete until the turn of the century. Until then, it seems likely that another 18,000 Scots will have been sent to prison, at a cost of in excess of UKP15 million, for a combination of petty offences and poverty. It is an experience, says Janet, that will leave them like it has her; unemployed, branded, as she sees it, a common criminal, and facing a long struggle to get their lives back on track. "It's all been downhill from prison. It's the top of a slippery slope that you can't seem to get back up," says Janet. "Some days I keep on hoping that things will get better. Others I wake up and feel like hanging myself - there doesn't seem to be any point to it all." - --- Checked-by: Don Beck