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 2132 contributions
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 12 January 2022
Jamie Greene
Okay. Thank you.
I come to my second rapid-fire question. It is not just mail that contains drugs; I am aware from speaking to prison officers that clothes are often soaked in drugs. Obviously, that is very difficult to deal with. How on earth are you going to manage the incidence of that?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 12 January 2022
Jamie Greene
What I am getting at is that, if so much mail has been posted, that is clearly a misuse of drugs. Those are classified drugs. Someone is posting them, so criminal behaviour is taking place somewhere in society but there does not seem to be a huge amount of follow-up or any prosecution. If people were being prosecuted for sending drugs, it might act as a disincentive for others in the future.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 12 January 2022
Jamie Greene
That might also be helpful, but I am looking for the figures since the implementation of the new policy. What percentage of all the mail that comes in is currently being photocopied?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 12 January 2022
Jamie Greene
Thank you for that. However, I presume that, if something is clearly identifiable as being from a family member, because it includes a message such as “Dear son”, “Dear brother” or “Dear Dad”, it is obvious where the mail originates from and, if it contains drugs, there is clearly an issue there. Perhaps, with some input from the police, the cabinet secretary could write to us on that.
My last question is in response to the cabinet secretary’s opening statement, in which I believe that he said that original items will be returned to prisoners on their release. This might be an obvious question, but could mail that is still soaked in drugs be returned to prisoners on their release? Clearly, we want those prisoners to go back into society drug-free and to mitigate any potential for them to return to misuse or addiction. Handing them back drugs seems a sure-fire way to send them down the spiral of ending up back in prison.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 12 January 2022
Jamie Greene
I appreciate that. If etizolam can be sent in the post, the big issues are about what else can be sent and how else it can be sent. People clearly still want to get drugs into prisons, and some prisoners will still want drugs to get in as well, so the really big question is, “What next?”
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 22 December 2021
Jamie Greene
Thank you. Convener, could I respond to what we have just heard?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 22 December 2021
Jamie Greene
I think that he has dropped off the call. I appreciate your response. I have some other questions but I am happy to reserve them for later in the meeting.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 22 December 2021
Jamie Greene
Thank you, convener. I hope that everyone can hear me okay, despite my earlier technical difficulties.
Good morning, Lord Advocate and thank you for appearing before us today. Much of what I was going to ask about has been covered in the initial questions. I will pick up on another point, which is based on the evidence session that we had with the cabinet secretary last week, which I am sure that you saw or indeed read the transcript of.
I was quite struck by what the cabinet secretary said in many of his answers. He made it clear that any fundamental changes to the legal system, whether on corroboration, judge-only trials, the removal of the not proven verdict and jury sizes and majorities, were matters for the Lord Advocate, and not for him, as cabinet secretary, to comment on. I want to get to the bottom of that, because in your answers you seem to be implying that such decisions are political decisions and matters for parliamentarians, not for the Crown. The politicians, on the other hand, are saying that those are matters for the Crown.
Where do you think that the buck will stop with the decisions that we are talking about, some of which will be very difficult and controversial?
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 22 December 2021
Jamie Greene
Thank you—that was very helpful.
Criminal Justice Committee
Meeting date: 22 December 2021
Jamie Greene
Thank you, convener—I will try to keep my questions succinct.
In 2018, Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prosecution in Scotland produced its “Thematic Report on the Victims’ Right to Review”. Last year, there were nearly 34,000 cases in which the Crown Office either discontinued prosecution or decided not to prosecute a case in the first place. What percentage of complainers were notified of those decisions and how were they notified? Why are less than 1 per cent of victims applying for a review of a decision not to prosecute or continue a case?
That question is to the Lord Advocate.