Empty the UK Jails of Crims to Make Room for White Political Prisoners! By Richard Miller (Somewhere in Europe)
UK prisons are already overcrowded. But the tyrannical anti-White government of Sir Keir Starmer, will clear out the criminals from prisons to put in the protesters, including people who merely re-sent posts. Anyone opposing the present anti-White regime was a target, and the police were working overtime to go through social media to nab Whites. Fighting real crime is a forgotten police practice; today the main role of the police is woke control!
And what prisoners exactly will be released? The first group is those serving less than five years, and the next group those serving more than five years. There will be those convicted of violent offences released, but not sexual offences. That is good to know; still there are enough rapists on the street to keep the population terrorised.
The British population should not accept all of this, but needs to organise a political movement to oppose what should have been opposed before it got to this White apocalypse level.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/08/19/nearly-2000-prisoners-to-be-released-on-single-day/
"About 2,000 prisoners are to be freed early on a single day next month in an attempt to tackle the jail overcrowding crisis.
The offenders, all serving sentences of less than five years, have been identified for a first tranche of early releases on Sept 10.
A second tranche of up to 1,700, all jailed for more than five years, will be freed on Oct 22, after the law was changed to allow them to be released after serving 40 per cent of their sentences rather than the current half.
The moves come after the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) activated emergency measures in the North of England on Monday to avoid running out of prison spaces in those areas as the arrests of rioters increased pressure on jails.
Operation Early Dawn, a contingency plan previously triggered in May, forces police to hold suspects in their cells or release them on bail until a prison space can be found, rather than send them straight to court.
The emergency scheme is designed to tide the prison service through to Sept 10 as the number of spare places in male jails hovers between just 300 and 500.
It is understood that no single prison will release more than 100 prisoners on Sept 10 - and sources said the mass release would be staggered over the day.
The mass early release is required to enable all those eligible to be freed, including those who have already passed the 40 per cent cut-off point but who have not reached the halfway point.
The same will apply on Oct 22, after which any eligible prisoner reaching the 40 per cent threshold will be automatically released. It is estimated that the scheme will free up about 5,500 prison spaces over its 18-month operation.
It will include criminals convicted of violence who have been jailed for less than four years, but exclude those serving longer sentences for more serious violence. Sexual offenders and terrorists will also be barred.
The MoJ said anyone released would be strictly monitored on licence by the Probation Service through measures which could include electronic tagging and curfews. They face being recalled to prison if they breach their licence conditions.
On a visit to Northern Ireland, Sir Keir Starmer said the prisons crisis would not deter the Government from taking a tough approach to the rioters. More than 1,000 people have been arrested in connection with violent disorder, with upwards of 470 people charged with offences.
"We've taken tough decisions, we've been able to prove that if you commit disorder, you can expect to be put through the criminal justice system quickly, and we will continue in that vein," said Sir Keir.
He blamed the Tories for "as basic a failure of government that you could possibly have got… which is a failure to have enough prison places for the number of prisoners that were being sentenced to prison".
Mark Fairhurst, the chairman of the Prison Officers' Association, said Operation Early Dawn would lead to "justice delayed". He said the most serious offenders would still end up in court and be guaranteed a prison cell, but less serious offenders would either spend longer in police cells or be bailed.
"It's justice delayed at the moment, because we're not clogging up police cells, so they might have to delay some of their operations," he said.
"When they arrest people, they've got to make sure they've got them a custody space in police custody, because we might have prisoners filling up their cells. Of course, they have got to pay overtime to supervise prisoners."
One senior police officer admitted it would "slow things down a little, but it's a small-term problem". "When we're doing planning we'll have to build in a more thoughtful process," he said. Officers would have to decide whether to remand a suspect into custody or simply subject them to stringent bail conditions instead.
Dept Chief Constable Nev Kemp, National Police Chiefs' Council custody lead, said police would "continue to arrest anyone that they need to in order to keep the public safe, including policing protests and events and ensuring that people are arrested as expected".
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