Prisoners let out on early release as part of a scheme to free up space in the United Kingdom’s overcrowded prison system are already back behind bars days later. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and his Labour government released around 1,750 prisoners early on Tuesday, earlier this week, and are expected to release a further 1,700 on October 22.
Some have already returned to prison, with one remaining free for only 36 hours. Most of those who are back in jail violated the terms of their release, limiting who they are allowed to meet or live with and requiring them to meet with probation officers.
Martin Jones, the chief inspector of probation, predicted that many prisoners would inevitably end up back in custody, predicting that as many as a third were likely to commit new crimes within the year. The latest Labour scheme allows for the release of prisoners who have served just 40 percent of their sentences.
While Prime Minister Starmer is releasing violent criminals, including one convicted of manslaughter over the machete killing of a 14-year-old boy, the prison system has been filling with those arrested in connection to recent anti-mass migration protests and riot.
Anti-mass migration protestors, who took to the streets following the fatal stabbing of multiple young girls in Southport, England, allegedly by a migration-background teenager, received years in prison for as little as shouting at police dogs or chanting, “Who the f**k is Allah?”