The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 1669 contributions
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 15 September 2021
Russell Findlay
I have a question for Teresa Medhurst. This week, ITV News has had a series of reports from Barlinnie prison. I will ask more about that later, but the Howard League Scotland’s submission to the committee says that the throughcare support officer initiative has not been reinstated and describes that as
“an abdication of responsibility on the part of the Scottish Government”.
One Barlinnie officer talked proudly and passionately about the work that he does to liaise with prisoners once they have left prison and how beneficial that can be. Why is there such a gap between the rhetoric from the Scottish Government and the reality? Do you know whether the scheme will be reinstated?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 15 September 2021
Russell Findlay
There is perhaps a perception that anonymous middle-class professionals such as you and I decide the fate of dangerous individuals and whether they are returned to the type of communities that we tend not to live in. If sentencing is, quite rightly, transparent, why is there no transparency on the time that is served? Has the Parole Board had any discussion with the Scottish Government about moving in that direction?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 15 September 2021
Russell Findlay
On that issue, it is worth pointing out that vulnerable prisoners are often targeted by the 600 prisoners who are marked as being members of organised crime groups.
Coming back to the security issues that you referred to in response to my colleague Jamie Greene, I spoke to Peter Smith about some of the stuff that was not broadcast. He told me that prisoners are now smuggling in seals that allow them to tamper with and reseal phones so that the staff who inspect them have no way of knowing what has happened. Is there any way in which you can get to the bottom of that? Can you quantify how many phones have been compromised?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 8 September 2021
Russell Findlay
Thank you. My next questions, which are for Police Scotland, are on unanswered 101 calls. I do not whether I should address them to ACC MacDonald or Chief Superintendent Blair.
We know from what was said at a Scottish Police Authority meeting that, in June, 71,000 calls—or around 40 per cent of all 101 calls that month—were abandoned. Given yesterday’s historic admissions with regard to the M9 tragedy, it seems that the problem of unanswered calls or calls not being acted on has not been addressed. In fact, the situation might even have worsened during the Covid pandemic. Is that the case? Why have we still not got a grip of the problem? What needs to happen to fix it and give the public confidence that calls will be answered?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 8 September 2021
Russell Findlay
I will quickly move on to Mr Lenehan, if he is there—I cannot quite make that out on the screen. In your submission, you talk about their being a suspicion that some witnesses and accused people are avoiding turning up to court, through the use of fake text messages—which, presumably, purport to be from medical or official sources. Will you expand on that, and tell us what, if anything, can be done about it?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 8 September 2021
Russell Findlay
That is very interesting. I am conscious of the time—I would like to ask questions of everybody, but I cannot do that. My final question is to Mr Dalling of the Law Society of Scotland. The thorny issue of legal services regulation has been with us for many years, and Covid appears to have put on ice Esther Roberton’s recommendations that a new single body should be established with the clear remit of dealing with such regulation. Most of you will not have read her review, but page 8 is worth a look, on which there is a diagram of the current regulatory framework, which serves no purpose for members of the public. From the Law Society’s perspective, given all the other massive challenges, will Covid get in the way of that long-overdue reform to the regulatory system?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 8 September 2021
Russell Findlay
Is there not a risk that, if you put a reliance on emergency calls being answered, as is right, people might give up on 101—that that becomes a bit of a pointless option—and turn to 999 calls?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 8 September 2021
Russell Findlay
I would like to ask Mr Blunden or Mr Haggart a question. You are dealing with a huge volume of fires—it is almost a return to normal—but, in recent weeks, there has also been some high-profile wilful fire raising that we believe is linked to organised crime. Can you quantify that in any way? Have you had any specific discussions on that issue, either internally or with the police and other agencies?
10:30Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 1 September 2021
Russell Findlay
I will touch quickly on one more subject. Statistics show that take-up of the voluntary victim notification scheme has gone down year on year. Why is that the case? I declare an interest in that I have joined up to the scheme, so I am familiar with its work.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 1 September 2021
Russell Findlay
My question is not necessarily on that area. It is on a more general point, so perhaps Pauline McNeill should come in before me.