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Underworld figures to encounter prohibitions on participating in football matches, traveling, joining clubs, and frequenting pubs

Offenders Face Restrictions at Public Venues, Including Pubs, Concerts, and Sports Events, under Proposed Penalty Enhancements

Offenders Facing Restrictions in Sports Events, Travel, Social Clubs, and Public Houses
Offenders Facing Restrictions in Sports Events, Travel, Social Clubs, and Public Houses

Underworld figures to encounter prohibitions on participating in football matches, traveling, joining clubs, and frequenting pubs

The UK Government has announced a series of changes aimed at deterring reoffending and making streets safer. These changes, part of the Plan for Change, will widen the range of punishments available to judges and increase the supervision of offenders in the community.

Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has stated that these reforms are crucial in cutting crime and making streets safer. Judges will now have the power to bar criminals from pubs, concerts, sports matches, and other specified locations as a form of punishment for any offence in any circumstance.

Offenders coming out of prison and supervised by the Probation Service will also face similar restrictions, as well as an expanded mandatory drug testing regime. Those serving their sentences in the community must have their freedom restricted there too, according to Shabana Mahmood.

The Probation Service will receive a significant boost in investment, with an increase of up to £700 million by 2028/29. This investment will allow for the recruitment of a further 1,300 Probation Officers this year, in addition to the 1,000 trainee probation officers recruited last year.

The number of Probation Officers has increased by seven per cent in the last 12 months, and trainee probation officer numbers have seen a surge of 15 per cent. Over 2,400 prison places have opened since July 2024, and the Government plans to create a total of 14,000 prison places.

The new measures are not limited to location restrictions. Judges will be able to impose driving limits, travel bans, and restriction zones on offenders. New technology, including artificial intelligence, will be introduced to lighten the administrative burden and increase supervision of dangerous offenders.

The Government has invested £7 billion to increase prison capacity, with the annual budget of the Probation Service currently around £1.6 billion. Offenders who break the rules can face being brought back to court or hauled back to prison as punishment.

When criminals break society's rules, they must be punished, according to Shabana Mahmood. These changes are aimed at ensuring punishments cut crime and prisons never run out of places for dangerous offenders. The UK Ministry of Justice will invest several million pounds to increase the number of probation officers, ensuring that offenders are adequately supervised in the community.

In conclusion, the Government's Plan for Change includes a range of measures designed to cut crime and make streets safer. These measures include widening the range of punishments available to judges, increasing the supervision of offenders in the community, and investing in new technology to aid in the supervision of dangerous offenders.

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