Friday, December 31, 2004

icCoventry - Support officers won't get new powers / IcCoventry, 27 Dec 2004

http://iccoventry.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0150swarksnews/tm_objectid=15017492&method=full&siteid=50003&headline=support-officers-won-t-get-new-powers-name_page.html
Annette Morgan
"Police community support officers across Coventry and Warwick-shire will not be allowed to use new powers to hold suspects for half an hour, it has been announced.
Police chiefs from Warwick-shire and the West Midlands have confirmed they will not be increasing the powers of their police community support officers (PCSOs) in accordance with new legislation allowing them to detain suspects."

Germany's Graying Gangsters / Deutsche Welle, 28 Dec 2004

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1441651,00.html?maca=en-bulletin-433-html
"Criminality among German senior citizens is on the rise. Many offenses are petty, such as shoplifting and traffic violations, but some are more serious. One state plans to open a prison designed for older offenders."

The 'Public Health' Approach to Guns: A Changed Landscape / Join together, 23 Dec 2004

http://www.jointogether.org/gv/news/features/reader/0,2061,575483,00.html
Dick Dahl
"Public-health professionals working in the area of gun violence are lauding a recent National Academy of Sciences (NAS) report calling for a major national effort to improve research on gun violence.

On Dec. 16, NAS issued its report, 'Firearms and Violence,' which pointed out that a sensible national response to gun violence is lacking, hampered by insufficient knowledge about gun ownership, gun markets, and gun use.

The report said that the current levels of knowledge about the relationship between firearms and violent crime, for instance, is too weak to support strong conclusions about various measures to prevent and control gun violence. It singled out assertions made by supporters of 'right to carry' laws, which now exist in 34 states, as being based on faulty claims that these laws deter crime."

The how-to of terror: al-Qaeda bulletin revealed - Global Terrorism / Sydney Morning Herald, 30 Dec 2004

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/12/30/1104344900198.html
"A new US government intelligence bulletin describes in the greatest detail yet al-Qaeda's techniques for assessing potential targets, extolling the lethal power of flying, shattered building glass and advising that kerosene and tyres are effective for a deadly arson attack.
'The focus is on maximising the destructive and killing power of an attack,' the bulletin says.
The bulletin provides a fresh glimpse of terrorist reports found in computers and disks seized in Pakistan in July. "

Thursday, December 23, 2004

Relationship of US gun culture to violence ill-understood / New Scientist, N0. 2479, 25 Dec 2004

"Gun violence kills tens of thousands of US citizens annually, but the basics of this social disease have never been rigorously examined
GUN violence kills tens of thousands of people in the US each year. Yet the basic characteristics of this modern social disease have never been studied in a rigorous way, according to a damning report by the US National Academy of Sciences (NAS).
It found that key intervention policies such as gun ownership laws and strategies for firearms education are based on poorly gathered or incomplete data and badly designed trials. This means there are few established facts about the cause-and-effect relationship between guns and many types of violence, or the effectiveness of gun control or educational programmes intended to steer young people away from firearms. 'While there is a large body of empirical research on firearms and violence, there is little consensus on even the basic facts about these important policy issues,' the report says. "

ID cards may become healthcare 'entitlement' cards / e-Health Insider, 22 Dec 2004

http://www.e-health-insider.com/news/item.cfm?ID=980
"The National Programme for IT has begun initial conversations with the Home Office to examine how the IT infrastructure being put in place in the NHS can be made compatible with national ID cards, production of which may eventually determine a patient's 'entitlement' to receive free healthcare services.
The ID card bill introduced in the House of Commons this week makes clear that the provision of 'public services' may become dependent on the production of a valid identity card. Providing a mechanism to prove entitlement to public services, together with countering terrorist threats, is cited as one of the reasons for the introduction of the national ID card scheme. "

Report finds foreigners defeat border security with stolen passports / GovExec, Dec 2004

http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1204/122004c1.htmChris Strohm
"Foreign travelers have entered the country using illegal passports the government knows are stolen, and the whereabouts of some with possible terrorist links remains unknown. "Aliens applying for admission to the United States using stolen passports have little reason to fear being caught and are usually admitted,". The report examined the use of stolen passports from 27 countries that are part of the U.S. Visa Waiver Program. Under the program, travelers from the countries are able to enter the United States without immigrant visas. Twenty-two of the countries are in Europe. The others are Australia, Brunei, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore."

Visa security policy unworkable / Statewatch News, Dec 2004

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/dec/07visas-residence-biometrics.htm
- insertion of chips would lead to 'collisions' with visa chips from other countries
- ePassport chip would be 'killed' by eVisa chip
- current deadline cannot be met, proposal unworkable"
Technical report to Council saying that the scheme will not work, doc no: 14534/04, 11.11.04) - http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/dec/bio-visas.pdf

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

Do these statistics really matter? / IcTeeside, 21 Dec 2004

http://icteesside.icnetwork.co.uk/thejournal/page.cfm?objectid=14999961&method=full&siteid=50081
"W have long suspected that statisticians are taking over the world - or Tony Blair's bit of it at any rate - but the Audit Commission 'raised the bar' in the data stakes yesterday.
We were invited to peruse a list of figures showing how good - or bad - our various police forces are at accurately recording crime."

Food parcels for asylum claimants BBC, 21 Dec 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/4112707.stm
"Dozens of failed asylum seekers are being left destitute by Home Office rules, the Welsh Refugee Council says.
The charity said around 100 people in Cardiff who have exhausted the appeals process face being left on the street or returned to their own country."

ID Cards: Citizens Advice highlights its concerns & issues / PublicTechnology, 22 Dec 2004

http://www.publictechnology.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=2266
"The Citizens Advice policy briefing in relation to the ID Cards Bill. It's an interesting overview of the ID Cards debate, and highlights (neatly) some of the prime issues surrounding the debate."

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

A Unique Punishment: Sentencing and the Prison Population in Scotland / SCCCJ Publications, 2004

http://www.scccj.org.uk/documents/A_unique_punishment.pdf

Turning Prisoners into Tax Payers" / The Inside Out Trust

The Inside Out Trust: "findings from our series of 'Employment Inside & Out' events which were held in prisons over the past 18 months. The guide describes the outcomes of the events.

The project has included production of a CD-Rom entitled "Unlocking the Future". We were delighted that former Home Secretary, David Blunkett, agreed to take part in this. His comments emphasise how important it is for employers to offer suitably qualified former prisoners jobs and he thanked them for considering this."

Employment inside & out - http://www.inside-out.org.uk/Yellow%20EIO%20report.pdf
Employers' events in prisons - http://www.inside-out.org.uk/EIO%20Events%20guide.pdf

Crime, courts & confidence - The Coulsfield Inquiry, Nov 2004

http://www.rethinking.org.uk/coulsfield/Final%20Report.pdf

Rethinking Crime and Punishment - The Report, Nov 2004

http://www.rethinking.org.uk/informed/pdf/RCP%20The%20Report.pdf

CCDO's In-Sites Magazine - Winter 2004 issue

http://www.ncjrs.org/ccdo/in-sites/welcome.html
If you are interested in crime prevention and neighborhood restoration, then you might want to know that In-Sites Magazine is now published exclusively on the Internet.

The Community Capacity Development Office, which assists communities as they seek to increase safety and revitalize neighborhoods, is proud to present In-Sites as an electronic magazine. Now there's more news about what's going on in Weed and Seed sites and what's working in communities across the nation. Our stories will focus on law enforcement; community policing; prevention, intervention, and treatment; neighborhood restoration; reentry; issues that are affecting American Indians and Alaska Natives; and more!

In this issue we have a number of interesting stories, including an award-winning community policing program, a successful reentry program, and two new federal partnerships that can help people manage and save their money.

Monday, December 20, 2004

Putin's Methods Counterproductive in Russian Fight on Corruption and Terrorism / RADIO FREE EUROPE/ RADIO LIBERTY, Dec 2004

http://www.rferl.org/releases/2004/12/289-191204.asp
"President Vladimir Putin's centralization of power within the Kremlin has not proved effective in combating either corruption or terrorism in Russia, say three experts on transnational crime in that country. The three experts, who spoke at a recent RFE/RL briefing, said the concentration of power had weakened efforts at rooting out corruption by silencing Russia's civil society and making it easier for terrorists to operate within Russia. "

Friday, December 17, 2004

Germany Creates New Terror Center / DW-World, 14 Dec 2004

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1428331,00.html?maca=en-bulletin-433-html

Panel seeks broad terrorism information-sharing changes / govExec, Dec 2004

http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1204/121304gsn1.htm
Joe Fiorill
A week after Congress approved a bill to implement the recommendations of the Sept. 11 commission, a federal advisory panel is set to issue a report calling for sweeping changes in information-sharing among levels of government that could flesh out the Sept. 11 bill's limited provisions on the subject.
Washington should restructure its domestic intelligence efforts to better coordinate information flowing to and from state and local officials and businesses, according to the report, which was obtained by Global Security Newswire.
The document-an unusually comprehensive attempt at addressing deficiencies in the handling and distribution of terrorist information collected at various levels of government-was released Tuesday by experts with the Homeland Security Advisory Council, a panel of mostly state and local
officials that advises the federal homeland security secretary.

Thursday, December 16, 2004

Charting Justice Reform in Chile: A Comparison of the Old and New Systems of Criminal Procedure

http://www.vera.org/publication_pdf/254_498.pdf?bulletin=38&token=1262
Antonio Marangunic, Ministerio Público of Chile and Todd Foglesong, Vera Institute of Justice
"Beginning in 2000, Chile launched an ambitious effort to remake its entire system of criminal justice. These reforms involve a new code of criminal procedure, new public institutions such as the National Prosecution Service and office of National Public Defender, as well as new people, new buildings, new views, and new practices. Together with the National Prosecution Service, or Ministerio Público, the Vera Institute has charted these changes, and here reports on some of the important differences between the old system of justice, still functioning in Metropolitan Santiago, and the new system of justice that has gradually taken roots in the rest of the country."

Methodist position on religious hatred branded 'naive' / Ekklesia, 15 Dec 2004

http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/content/news_syndication/article_041215dh.shtml
"A senior Evangelical has said that the position taken by the Methodist Church over the Government's proposed legislation on religious hatred is 'naive'.

The head of public policy at the Evangelical Alliance, Don Horrocks, told the Ekklesia news service that the new legislation could lead to a 'lawyers paradise'. "

Effectiveness at what? The process and impact of community involvement in area-based Initiatives / Scottish Centre for Research on Social Justice

http://www.scrsj.ac.uk/Publications/WP1HousingRG.pdf
: "Goodlad, R., Burton, P., and Croft, J. (2004). SCRSJ Working Paper No. 2. "

Building bridges: local responses to the resettlement of asylum seekers / [Scotland] Innovations Report, 8 Dec 2004

http://www.innovations-report.de/html/berichte/gesellschaftswissenschaften/bericht-37427.html
"New research reveals the positive role of local people and groups in promoting the integration of asylum seekers in Glasgow. As birth rates decline and the population ages in Scotland, refugees could bring significant benefits to Scottish society in the future. To promote their future participation in Scottish society, it is vital that appropriate support services are in place. "

Building Bridges Report - http://www.scrsj.ac.uk/Publications/BuildingBridges.pdf

Combatting Stereotypes With Facts / [Germany] Deutsche Welle, 15 Dec 2004|

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1428997,00.html?maca=en-bulletin-433-html
"Though stereotypes about foreigners continue to proliferate in Germany, a new study is challenging some beliefs about immigrant girls. They're far more ambitious and career aware than they're given credit for."

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

Taser Deployments and Injuries: Analysis of Current and Emerging Trends / Dec 2004

http://www.taser.com/documents/Orange_Co_FL_Div_of_Justice_Study.pdf
Dr. Charlie Mesloh, Institute for Technological Innovation and Research at Florida Gulf Coast University & OCSO Captain Steve Hougland, Ph.D.

See also - http://www.taser.com/SavingLives/index.htm

Taser technology review & interim recommendations / [Canada] Sep 2004

http://www.opcc.bc.ca/Reports/TASER%20Report%20-%20photos.pdf

Prison alternatives : editorial / Herald, 13 Dec 2004

http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/29617.html
"Crime rates have fallen but the prison population continues to rise. The trend belongs in an upside-down world where logic is gloriously defied. Unfortunately, the trend is real and it occurs in modern Scotland."
The Prison Population - http://www.sacro.org.uk/research/coulsfieldinquiry.pdf

Dutch ban terror groups on EU blacklist / Expatica Netherlands, 7 Dec 2004

http://www.expatica.com/source/site_article.asp?subchannel_id=13&story_id=14783&name=Dutch+ban+terror+groups+on+EU+blacklist
The Netherlands plans to ban all terrorist groups listed on the European Union's blacklist. Active involvement with such groups will be a criminal offence. The groups on the blacklist include the PKK (Kurdish Workers Party, now called Kongra-Gel), the Palestinian group Hamas, the Islamicist organisation Al-Takfir, the Muslim Al-Aqsa Nederland foundation, and the Marxist New Peoples Army (NPA) of the Philippines. Other foreign groups can also be declared by a court to be operating in breach of public order, the government said.

MPs slam integration plan for Dutch people / Expatica Netherlands, 6 Dec 2004

"Almost all political parties in the Dutch Parliament have strongly criticised government plans to force Dutch people with a low education to undergo integration courses. And while the CDA praised Verdonk for seeking methods to obligate immigrants to integrate, the party labelled her plans to force Dutch natives to also undergo integration into society as "nonsense". It said the minister's energies should be focused on immigrants. Studies indicated in October that forcing permanent dual national immigrants to undergo Dutch language classes breaches the principle of equality."

Who are you and can you prove it? / Expatica Netherlands,

http://www.expatica.com/source/site_article.asp?subchannel_id=13&story_id=14905&name=Who+are+you+andcan+you+prove+it%3F
Mindy Ran
"The 'Identificatieplicht' is the latest step in a major government campaign to tackle a range of crime, public disturbance and truancy problems in the Netherlands."

Methodist church backs religious hatred bill / Ekklesia, 13 Dec 2004

http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/content/news_syndication/article_041213rh.shtml
"In the face of opposition from a number of conservative Christian groups, the Methodist Church has publicly backed Government proposals to outlaw actions which incite religious hatred."

Church group expresses concern over global recruitment of migrant workers / Ekklesia, 14 Dec 2004

http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/content/news_syndication/article_041214mig.shtml
"A Church group has expressed concern about "global recruitment" to meet the needs of rich nations and called on the Government to work within the EU for the ratification of the 1990 International Convention on the Protection of Migrant Workers."

Annual report 2004: the state of the drugs problem in the European Union and Norway

http://annualreport.emcdda.eu.int/en/home-en.html
Drug facts, figures and analyses: across Europe and by country. Latest trends and social, legal and political responses. Selected issues: evaluation of national drug strategies; cannabis problems in context; co-morbidity.
PDF - http://annualreport.emcdda.eu.int/download/ar2004-en.pdf

Monday, December 13, 2004

Cellphone sniffs out dirty bombs / New Scientist, 9 Dec 2004

http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99996766
"A smart phone that can detect radiation may soon be helping the police to find the raw materials for radioactive “dirty bombs” before they are deployed. The phones will glean data as the officers carrying them go about their daily business, and the information will be used to draw up maps of radiation that will expose illicit stores of nuclear material."

State of Prisons Is A Scandal, Say Bishops / the Scotsman, 9 Dec 2004

http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3863725
Laura Scott and David Barrett
"Radical reforms are needed to rectify the “scandalous” state of prisons across the nation, a report said. Prisons in England and Wales are used as society’s “dustbin” and “are becoming a public disgrace”, Catholic bishops warned in the report."
A place of Redemption - The full text of this document will be available at http://www.catholic-ew.org.uk/resource/resource_home.htm after Easter 2005.

'No surprise' over group rape findings / Expatica Netherlands,

http://www.expatica.com/source/site_article.asp?subchannel_id=19&story_id=14870&name='No+surprise'+over+group+rape+findings
"Research indicating high involvement by minorities in a sample study of group rape and sex offences committed by teens in the Netherlands was "not surprising" given the findings of studies conducted into other crimes. The Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement said earlier this week that an estimated 200 teens are registered with justice authorities each year for a group sex offence. This is a third of the total number of youth sex cases registered each year."

Slow Start for Britain's First Community Judge / The Scotsman, 9 Dec 2004

http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3865051
"The new Community Justice Centre in Liverpool is based on a scheme in New York, and has been heralded by the government as a way to increase public confidence in the justice system as well as reducing crime. The centre is a joint project between the Home Office, the Department for Constitutional Affairs and the Crown Prosecution Service. It is closely based on Red Hook Community Justice Centre in New York, which Home Secretary David Blunkett visited in 2003. Red Hook was credited with helping to clean up New York’s image when it opened more than 10 years ago."

US warns of terrorist laser attack on planes / Sydney Morning Herald, 10 Dec 2004

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/12/10/1102625517907.html
"Terrorists may seek to down aircraft by shining powerful lasers into cockpits to blind pilots during landing approaches, according to an official US warning. The memo sent by the FBI and the Homeland Security Department says there is evidence that terrorists have explored using lasers as weapons, though there is no specific intelligence indicating al-Qaeda or other groups might use lasers in the United States."

The deterrent effect of capital punishment: A review of the research evidence / [Australia] BOCSAR, 2004

http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/bocsar1.nsf/files/CJB84.pdf/$file/CJB84.pdf

Marine terror attack plan to spark global crisis / Daily Mail, 10 Dec 2004

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=330232&in_page_id=1770
"Al Qaeda is set to stage a waterborne September 11-style attack in the next 12 months, UK security experts are claiming.
The terror "spectacular" would not even have to succeed to throw the global economy into chaos. Simply capturing a ship on the key Red Sea route between Europe and Asia could cause a world trade crisis."

Britons call for curbs on migration / Sydney Morning Herald, 11 Dec 2004

http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Britons-call-for-curbs-on-migration/2004/12/10/1102625537541.html
"Nearly three-quarters of British people believe there are too many immigrants coming into the country, an opinion poll published yesterday found. A survey carried out for The Economist suggests that record levels of immigration are now the principal concern of voters, ahead of public services, crime and terrorism."

Are asylum laws working? / BBC, 10 Dec 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/talking_point/4084905.stm
Are the asylum laws working? Has there been an asylum crisis in Britain or has the issue been influenced by negative media reporting? Is enough being done to help genuine refugees? How does Britain compare with other European countries?
Comments reflecting the balance of opinion the BBC has received.

British immigration checks discriminatory - House of Lords / Romani Voda, 9 Dec 2004

http://www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=servis/z_en_2004_0195
The British judiciary has decided that during immigration checks at Prague's Ruzyne airport the British government exposed Romanies from the Czech Republic who intended to travel to Britain to racial discrimination, according to the conclusion by the House of Lords judicial committee.

The checks were carried out at the Prague Ruzyne airport from July 2001 by British immigration officials who sought to lower the number of asylum seekers in Britain, especially applicants from the ranks of Czech Romanies.

In 2002, the British human rights organisation Liberty lodged a complaint against the checks on behalf of six anonymous complainers and the European Centre for Roma Rights. A first instance court has rejected the complaint. An appeals court, however, arrived at the conclusion that the regulations practically certainly discriminated against Romanies, but it described the discrimination as justifiable because at that time there was a higher probability in the case of Romanies that they would ask for asylum in Britain than in the case of other persons.

Prison officers tried to separate inmates from different backgrounds at a jail which witnessed a racist killing, an inquiry has heard. / BBC, 10 Dec 2

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4086531.stm
"Prison officers tried to separate inmates from different backgrounds at a jail which witnessed a racist killing, an inquiry has heard. A senior Feltham officer said before the murder of Zahid Mubarek staff had thought the policy would stop clashes. But Keith Greenslade said officers had a "naive" view of racism at the west London young offenders' institution. And he added an officer could have deliberately housed a racist with a black or Asian prisoner."

Police given computer spy powers / [Australia] Sydney Morning Herald,

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/12/12/1102786954590.html
Rob O'Neill
2Federal and state police now have the power to use computer spyware to gather evidence in a broad range of investigations after legal changes last week. The Surveillance Devices Act allows police to obtain a warrant to use software surveillance technologies, including systems that track and log keystrokes on a computer keyboard. The law applies to the Australian Federal Police and to state police investigating Commonwealth offences."

Lancashire Constabulary gives 250 officers phone PDAs in mobile data trial / Public Technology, 13 Dec 2004

http://www.publictechnology.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=2217
Lancashire Constabulary has launched one of the UK’s largest police hand-held mobile data trials. 250 police officers and 30 support staff – the entire Lancashire Central Division – will be equipped with O2 Xda II pocket computers from which they can quickly and easily access a host of information sources. In a pre-trial, the process of a missing person report was reduced from two hours to 20 minutes. It is hoped that access to mobile data will enable officers to be more efficient and effective, including spending around an hour per shift longer in the community rather than at the police station.

Tenet warns of terrorists combining physical, telecommunications attacks / GovExec, Dec 2004

http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1204/120104c1.htm
Chris Strohm
Former CIA Director George Tenet last week said greater government regulation of the Internet and telecommunications networks is needed in order to guard against terrorist attacks. The U.S. intelligence community needs to consider how terrorists might attempt to couple an attack on telecommunication networks with a physical attack.

Transforming School Culture: An Update /

http://www.safersanerschools.org/library/sssupdate.html
Laura Mirsky
"The IIRP's SaferSanerSchools program has grown considerably since its
initial pilot projects and is training schools in restorative
practices all over the world. This article describes how restorative practices are
being implemented at three diverse school districts and relates the
ways in which administrators, teachers and students have benefited."
PDF - http://www.safersanerschools.org/library/sssupdate.html

The Pro-Am Revolution : How enthusiasts are changing our economy and society / Demos, 2004

http://www.demos.co.uk/proamrevolutionfinal_pdf_media_public.aspx
Charles Leadbeater, Paul Miller
Pro-Ams are committed, networked amateurs working to professional standards. Documents the rise of 'serious leisure' as more people commit time, energy and expertise to a widening area of activities, from acting to astronomy. The ‘Pro-Ams revolution’ will change the way we think about work and leisure. For Pro-Ams, leisure is not passive consumerism but active and participatory, it involves the deployment of publicly accredited knowledge and skills, often built up over a long career, which has involved sacrifices and frustrations. The 20th century witnessed the rise of professionals in medicine, science, education, and politics. In one field after another, amateurs and their ramshackle organisations were driven out by people who knew what they were doing and had certificates to prove it.

Dream On : Sleep in the 24/7 society / Demos, 2004

http://www.demos.co.uk/dreamon_pdf_media_public.aspx
Charles Leadbeater
"In a 24/7 society the lack of sleep is affecting our work and family
lives. By helping us to sleep more, government and employers can help us
to lead a happier, more productive life."

Disorganisation : Why future organisations must 'loosen up' / Demos, 2004

http://www.demos.co.uk/Disorganisationfinal_pdf_media_public.aspx
Paul Miller, Paul Skidmore
"Employees want more human organisations with greater autonomy and
flexibility. To keep their best staff employers will have to
‘disorganise’."

Thursday, December 09, 2004

Passports go electronic with new microchip / Christian Science Monitor, 9 Dec 2004

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1209/p12s01-stct.html?s=hns
Susan Llewelyn Leach
"The US passport is about to go electronic, with a tiny microchip embedded in its cover. Along with digitized pictures, holograms, security ink, and 'ghost' photos - all security features added since 2002 - the chip is the latest outpost in the battle to outwit tamperers. But it's also one that worries privacy advocates.
The RFID (radio frequency identification) chip in each passport will contain the same personal data as now appear on the inside pages - name, date of birth, place of birth, issuing office - and a digitized version of the photo. But the 64K chip will be read remotely. And there's the rub"

Think tank survey claims 81% support UK ID cards / The Register, 8 Dec 2004

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/12/08/reform_id_survey/
John Lettice
"A survey carried out for the think tank Reform claims 81 per cent of the British public favour the introduction of compulsory ID cards, with 29 per cent thinking it would be a very good idea, and 52 per cent a good idea. The survey, of 1,022 adults, was carried out by ICM between 1st and 2nd December, and reflects the largely non fact-based public viewpoint that cards are harmless, would tackle terror, fraud and illegal immigration, and 'what have you got to hide anyway?'
The survey does however signpost several vulnerabilities of the scheme, the 'Madrid' factor and cost, and as the public grasps the full significance of the National Identity Register, this could present a third problem. "

Survey Results - http://www.icmresearch.co.uk/reviews/2004/Reform%20-%20ID%20cards/reform-id-cards-dec-04.asp

State weighs new crystal laws / [USA] New York Blade Online, 3 Dec 2004

http://www.newyorkblade.com/2004/12-3/news/localnews/state.cfm
Mike Lavers
"As state and city officials and local health organizations continue to grapple with how to stop the increasing popularity of crystal methamphetamines among gay men, some public policy officials have renewed calls for more stringent drug laws. These laws, according to their supporters, would specifically target manufacturers and distributors of crystal meth. "

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

Justice Dept. Begins Study of Safety of the Taser Electric Gun / New York times, 7 Dec 2004

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/07/business/07taser.html?oref=login
Alex Berenson
"A spokeswoman for the Justice Department said that it neither encouraged nor discouraged police departments in buying Tasers but that it had begun to study their safety and effectiveness. The department has financed a study at the University of Wisconsin to determine how electrical currents move through the body, as well as a study at Wake Forest to examine injuries caused by Tasers and similar weapons in real-life situations. "

Gang members, survivors work toward peace / Christian Science Monitor, 8 Dec 2004

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1208/p02s01-ussc.html?s=hns
Sara B. Miller
"He is a former gang member, with bullet wounds for scars and a criminal record that follows him wherever he goes.
She is a mother, whose son died in gang crossfire one winter afternoon in 1993 as the 15-year-old headed to a party sponsored by Teens Against Gang Violence. the two have begun working together - she with victims of homicide, he with former and current gang members - to reduce violence by generating dialogue and fostering self-esteem in the community."

Criminal lineups get a makeover | Christian Science Monitor, 8 Dec 2004

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1208/p11s01-usju.html?s=hns
Randy Dotinga
"Despite eternal questions about the reliability of memory, criminal lineups remain a mainstay of American justice: Witnesses peer at a handful of potential suspects - sometimes in photographs, sometimes in person - and try to pick out the culprit.
But in a small but growing number of jurisdictions, the traditional lineup is undergoing a makeover. Armed with academic studies, defense lawyers and university researchers say the current system, which confronts witnesses with several potential suspects at once, is rigged against the innocent."

Tuesday, December 07, 2004

'Soft options' for criminals savaged / Scotsman, 6 Dec 2004

http://news.scotsman.com/politics.cfm?id=1395222004
Andrew Denholm
Key points
� New strategy based on community service instead of prison sentences
� Critics hit out at plans for training camps for offenders
� More use of electronic tagging proposed for wider range of offences

Key quote
'The prison service is operating the same system which has been going for centuries. There is no attempt to get to know prisoners or deal with their problems on a personal level. The attitude is still very much 'us' and 'them'' - Billy McOwen, reformed offender

Story in full SCOTTISH Executive proposals to allow more burglars, car thieves and other criminals to escape jail in favour of community rehabilitation were yesterday branded a 'green light' for criminals. "

Monday, December 06, 2004

Tighten laws to curb illegal immigration, says new study / Khaleej Times, 5 Dec 2004

http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theuae/2004/December/theuae_December100.xml§ion=theuae
Muawia E. Ibrahim
"The study, titled "Legal Aspects of Deportation in the UAE", addressed the issue of economic and financial effects of deportation of infiltrators saying that these illegal immigrants constitute a heavy burden on national economy. "The law allows detention of any foreigner against whom a deportation order is issued for a period not exceeding two weeks. As Article 83 of the law permits the Ministry of Interior to bear the expense of deporting any foreigner from the country, the government caters to all expense related to this issue including accommodation and return tickets for some of these illegal immigrants, the study said."

Immigration reform crucial to security /- The Washington Times, 5 Dec 2004

http://washingtontimes.com/commentary/20041205-123308-1292r.htm
Elton Gallegly
"If the intelligence reform bill has any chance of passage when Congress returns to the Capitol this week, it must meet all the goals outlined by the September 11 commission's comprehensive report, not just the few selected by the Senate. Specifically, it will have to address illegal immigration as a national security threat.
'The challenge for national security in an age of terrorism is to prevent the very few people who may pose overwhelming risks from entering or remaining in the United States undetected,' the September 11 commissioners wrote. "

Sunday, December 05, 2004

Dad offers ‘Spikey’ to foil date rape drugs / Daily Times , 13 Nov 2004

Daily Times - Site Edition
A dedicated British father has come up with a new way to keep his daughter safe from “spikers” — a glow-in-the-dark plastic stopper which keeps date rapists from dropping drugs into drinks. “Spikey” can be placed at the head of a bottle, leaving only enough room for a straw and sealing off its contents from the addition of any liquid, powder or tablet drug. Drink-spiking, usually linked to date rape, is seen as a growing problem in Britain.

Police expand use of Taser / [USA] Arizon Republic, 11 Nov 2004

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/1107tasermain07.html
Robert Anglen
"An Arizona Republic analysis of police reports of Taser-related incidents from 2003 found that Phoenix police were far more likely to use the stun guns to make someone obey orders at a traffic stop than to bring down an armed robber.

Officers used Tasers repeatedly last year as compliance tools, to avoid chases and physical confrontations. The officers shocked people who made threatening gestures, tried to run away or would not follow commands to raise hands, turn around or lie on the ground.

With medical examiners finding that Tasers may have played a role in the deaths of eight people around the country, ethical, legal and procedural concerns are being raised about the guns' use in situations involving drunken drivers, shoplifters, family fights and the mentally ill. At the heart of many of these concerns is the potential liability for a police department or city in an expensive wrongful-death suit."

he war on drugs is ‘lost’ / The Malta Independent Daily, 7 Nov 2004

http://www.independent.com.mt/daily/newsview.asp?id=28565
Addictive Substance Abuse
Juan Ameen
"Former Interpol chief Raymond Kendall has admitted that drug prohibition has failed; in fact he claimed that it has made things worse. In an article in French newspaper Le Monde, Kendall declared the war on drugs lost and said that enforcement policies had failed to protect the world from drugs. The only effective solution was 'harm reduction'. In 2008, the UN drug conventions policy renewal will take place and Kendall called for Europe to take the lead in a reform policy that has never been seen before. "

SAN JOSE / Study finds taser used on more white arrestees / [USA] SFGate, 4 Dec 2004

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/12/04/BAGI0A6AJO1.DTL
"A six-month San Jose police study released Friday shows white arrestees are more likely to be zapped with Taser stun guns and also raises concerns by civil rights advocates that Hispanics and blacks were being arrested and 'Tased' disproportionate to their representation in the population.
However, several civil libertarians praised San Jose police Chief Robert Davis for publicly tracking the race and age of suspects who were subdued with Tasers after the department became one of the first major departments in the country to arm all 800 patrol officers with stun guns. "

'If they carry on offending the only place for them is prison' / Telegraph,

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/12/04/nmet104.xml&sSheet=/news/2004/12/04/ixnewstop.html
"The outgoing Met chief tells John Steele that his force will not turn a blind eye to street yobbism.
Britain's record prison population will have to rise over several years as police meet the public demand for a tougher approach to crime and drunken louts, said Sir John Stevens, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner.
He said Scotland Yard was considering asking for a Home Office prison ship on the Thames to provide cell space because the Met cannot house all those it is arresting."

Minister to investigate missing airport uniforms / CBC News, 4 Dec 2004

http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2004/12/04/airport-security041204.html
National & International Security
"More than 1,000 uniforms and parts of uniforms were lost or stolen, and nearly 100 security badges went missing over a nine-month period, CBC News reported after uncovering documents from the federal agency responsible for making air travel safe"

Saturday, December 04, 2004

Study Highlights Need for Integrated Counseling for Women / Join together, 3 Dec 2004

http://www.jointogether.org/sa/news/alerts/reader/0%2C1854%2C575315%2C00.html
Domestic Abuse
"The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) today released study findings showing that women with mental and substance abuse disorders and histories of violence (trauma) can improve when treated with counseling that addresses all three of their service needs. Women who have a voice in their own treatment report better outcomes than women who do not."

Fifteen Years of Guidelines Sentencing: / U.S. Sentencing Commission, Nov 2004

An Assessment of How Well the Federal Criminal Justice System Is Achieving the Goals of Sentencing Reform
http://www.ussc.gov/15_year/15year.htm
"This study is a comprehensive review of the research literature and sentencing data to assess how well the guidelines have achieved the goals for sentencing reform established by Congress in the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984. These goals include increased certainty and transparency of sentences, increased severity of sentences for certain types of serious crimes, and reduced sentencing disparity, including racial and ethnic disparity"

Mass. Gets Electronic Gun Fingerprinting / [USA] The New York Times, 2 Dec 2004

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Guns-Fingerprints.html?oref=login&oref=login
"With a quick electronic scan of a fingerprint, gun shop owners in Massachusetts will know immediately if a customer is eligible to buy a weapon, using a system that officials say is the first of its kind in the nation.
The Massachusetts Instant Record Check System, developed over the past six years with nearly $7 million in technology grant money, will be in place in all police departments and gun shops across the state by next summer. It is currently operating in three shops and about 140 police departments."

Net no crime haven: study / Sydney Morning Herald, 3 Dec 2004

http://www.smh.com.au/news/Breaking/Net-no-crime-haven-study/2004/12/03/1101923302068.html
"The internet may not be the haven for high tech crime that it seems, an Australian criminologist believes.
Though solving these crimes may seem akin to achieving world peace, Australian Institute of Criminology director Russell Smith said significant steps had already been taken.
However, computer crime remains technically difficult to investigate and there were many unresolved legal and practical problems.
In a paper released by the institute yesterday, Dr Smith outlined seven barriers to the successful investigation of cross-border high tech crime."

Risk assessment by mental health professionals and the prevention of future violent behaviour [CRC funded reports]

http://www.aic.gov.au/crc/reports/200001-18.pdf
Bernadette McSherry
"The report examines the current legal and ethical background to risk assessment for the purpose of preventing future serious injury to others. It outlines the development of the concepts of risk assessment and risk management and the different ways in which risk can be measured. It now appears that there is some degree of consensus that well-trained mental health professionals should be able to predict a patient's short term potential for violence."

Understanding male domestic partner abusers [T&I no. 283]

http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi283t.html
Jeffrey C Richards, Angus J MacLachlan, Wayne Scott and Raeleene Gregory
ISBN 0 642 53852 2 ; ISSN 0817-8542
"Research in the past decade has found that certain ways of responding to domestic partner abusers, particularly psycho-educational approaches, can be effective in modifying abusive behaviours. The study described in this paper sought to classify male domestic partner abusers by certain identified characteristics and determine whether they responded differently to a Men's Behaviour Change Program conducted by community agencies in regional Victoria. It was found that some types of male abusers appeared to derive greater benefits from the standard 12-week program than others. Those with antisocial personality disorders tended not to respond favourably. Further research work is now required to identify interventions that will be successful with abusers who have significant antisocial personalities"
PDF - http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi283.pdf

Identification of characteristics and patterns of male domestic partner abusers [CRC funded reports]

http://www.aic.gov.au/crc/reports/200001-04.pdf
Jeffrey C Richards, Angus J MacLachlan, Wayne Scott and Raeleene Gregory
Criminology Research Council grant ; (4/00-01)

Criminal forfeiture and restriction-of-use orders in sentencing high tech offenders [T&I no. 286]

http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi286t.html
Russell G Smith
ISBN 0 642 53855 7 ; ISSN 0817-8542
"Courts in the United States, Europe and Australia have in recent years experimented with sanctions which require the computer of an offender convicted of high tech crimes to be forfeited, or which seek to prohibit the offender from undertaking certain, or all, computer-related activities like possessing or using computers or gaining access to the internet. Some courts have also imposed requirements that the offender's computer activities be monitored by a probation officer or that the offender's computer have filtering software installed to prevent access to certain types of content. This paper considers whether such orders are legally and practically justifiable as appropriate judicial punishments."
PDF - http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi286.pdf

Impediments to the successful investigation of transnational high tech crime [T&I no. 285]

http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi285t.html
Russell G Smith
ISBN 0 642 53848 4 ; ISSN 0817-8542
"This paper identifies a number of barriers to the effective investigation of high tech crime across borders, and offers some solutions that could be used to streamline future investigations in cyberspace."
PDF - http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/tandi2/tandi285.pdf

Police should welcome geeks / Techworld, 3 December 2004

http://www.techworld.com/security/news/index.cfm?NewsID=2742
Matthew Broersma
"The UK's system for handling cybercrime is overburdened, and one solution might be to draft in computer geeks as special constables, according to studies published this week.
The two reports are a collaboration between Europe-wide parliament-industry working group Eurim and UK think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), and are only the latest to recognise that the UK's criminal justice system is struggling to keep up with the international scope and sophistication of Internet-enabled crime. Eurim/IPPR studies from earlier this year recommended a new skills framework as well as help from the private sector.
The two papers published this week recommend bringing in IT experts as special constables, as well as the creation of streamlined and better-resourced ways of reporting crime and clearer guidance on security for enterprises and users. "

Reducing opportunities for e-cirme - http://www.eurim.org.uk/activities/ecrime/reducingops.doc

The Reporting of Cybercrime - http://www.eurim.org.uk/activities/ecrime/reporting.doc

Friday, December 03, 2004

Criminals 'should repay victims' / BBC News, 2 Dec 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4059763.stm
"Criminals should be forced to carry out more work to 'pay back' communities they harm, according to a report by a charity published on Thursday.
The �3m Rethinking Crime and Punishment (RCP) research project wants reforms including schemes where locals decide what community work offenders do.
'It is time for a radical rethink of crime and punishment,' spokesman Joe Levenson said.
The RCP report concludes: 'Pay back should be central to punishment.' "

Rethinking Crime & Punishment - The Report
http://www.rethinking.org.uk/informed/pdf/RCP%20The%20Report.pdf

Women in prison / The-Tidings.com, 3 Dec 2004

http://www.the-tidings.com/2004/1203/prison.htm
Ellie Hidalgo
"Women comprise only seven percent of the state's prison population, and their needs are often ignored as California grapples with its much larger male population, say prison reform advocates.

About 80 percent of the nearly 11,000 women in California's state prisons are mothers, the majority single mothers. They struggle to find relatives to care for their children and yearn to maintain contact with them while serving their sentences. Inside prison, they do their utmost to maintain a sense of self-worth and dignity as women, despite what many say are humiliating and degrading prison policies. "

It Is Policing But Not As We Know It / News Shopper, 2 Dec 2004

http://www.newsshopper.co.uk/news/features/display.var.550950.0.it_is_policing_but_not_as_we_know_it.php
Linda Piper
"After pioneering safer neighbourhood policing and special constable recruiting, a new experiment is now under way in Bexley which could see the way Britain is policed radically altered. "

Toward safe and orderly schools - national study of delinquency prevention in schools / [USA]National Institute of Justice, Nov 2004

http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/205005.pdf
"Problem behavior is widespread and most common in urban areas and middle schools. Schools have adopted a large and diverse array of activities, curricular programs, and security measures, but many of these are unproven or poorly implemented. Key characteristics of successful programs and how schools can improve program quality and implementation are identified. "

School Safety Resources / JustNet

http://www.nlectc.org/assistance/schoolsafety.html
"Events in recent years have shown that schools are not immune from violent critical incidents. The Internet resources gathered here are intended to assist law enforcement and school personnel with preparation, response, and resolution in regards to a school critical incident. Looks at preparation, response and resolution. "

ID cards 'to tie business up in red tape' / Financial Times, 2 Dec 2004

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/6a23b0ce-448d-11d9-9f6a-00000e2511c8.html
Nicholas Timmins
"Plans for a national identity card are set to tie business up in red tape, the government's regulatory watchdog has warned. As the cards come in on a voluntary basis, they look likely to lead to the sort of 'regulatory creep' produced by money-laundering regulations.
Those regulations have seen people, opening new accounts at their own bank, asked to produce passports and other forms of identity, and solicitors demanding proof of identity before clearing house sales.
And, in spite of the Home Office's statement that it is not possible to say whether businesses will be affected by the cards as they come in, David Arculus, chairman of the Better Regulation Task Force, feels that they will. "

All terror attacks use false passports, claims Interpol chief / The Register, 2 Dec 2004

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/12/02/noble_wows_lords/
John Lettice
"The 'terrorists use false ID' claim achieved a significant escalation yesterday as Interpol general secretary Ron Noble told a House of Lords Committee that all terrorist incidents involve a false passport. The UK Home Office has clearly been thinking small when it trots out the 'fact' that 35 per cent of terrorists use false IDs in support of its ID card scheme. But surely Noble over-eggs the pudding, just ever so slightly?
Actually his claim is such demonstrable rubbish that it's difficult to see how he could have said quite what the BBC report quotes him as saying: 'It's been proven in every single terrorist incident that a fraudulent passport has been used.' "

Thursday, December 02, 2004

Article: Cyber detective links up crimes / New Scientist, 1 Dec 2004

http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99996734
"Many more crimes might be solved if detectives were able to compare the records for cases with all the files on past crimes. Now an artificial intelligence system has been designed to do precisely that. Working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, it could look for telltale similarities in crime records and alert detectives when it finds them"

Article: Psychotic symptoms more likely with cannabis / New Scientist, 1 Dec 2004

http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99996745
"Using marijuana in adolescence and early adulthood can cause psychotic symptoms later in life, a new study suggests. The risk of developing these symptoms is �moderate�, say researchers, though is higher in people with a pre-disposition to psychosis."

Red tape 'hampers' crime schemes / BBC News, 1 Dec 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4057095.stm
"Crime reduction projects funded by the Home Office are being hampered by red tape, a study has concluded.
The government department has spent almost £1bn on such projects in the past five years.
The National Audit Office report said many were 'innovative and successful' but the funding arrangements for them were too complicated.
It said crime could be cut 'considerably' if less time and money was spend arranging funding. "

Reducing Crime: the Home Office working with Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnerships - http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/nao_reports/04-05/040516.pdf

Talks consider use of ID cards for business / vnunet.com, 1 Dec 2004

http://www.vnunet.com/news/1159786
James Watson, Computing 01 Dec 2004
"The government is working with the private sector to determine how ID cards for a range of commercial transactions.
If adopted, the plan would create a central audit trail of every citizen's major transactions with both government and business."

ID cards: "This is not a Big Brother database" / Silicon.com, 1 Dec 2004

http://management.silicon.com/government/0,39024677,39126226,00.htmAndy McClure
The government has again hit out at critics of its controversial compulsory ID card Bill, claiming it is not an infringement on civil liberties and that it will improve security in the UK. Speaking at a press briefing today, Home Office minister Des Browne MP attempted to dismiss the 'myths' created by opponents of the ID card scheme and said 'this is not a Big Brother database'.
Browne said those who cite the terrorist bombings in Madrid last year as evidence that ID cards have not worked in Spain are missing the point. 'It does not stop it but it helps you police it and interdict it,' he said. "

Annual Reports 2003-2004 - Security Intelligence Review Committee / Canada

http://www.sirc.gc.ca/annual/2003-2004/intro_e.html
PDF - http://www.sirc.gc.ca/pdfs/ar_2003-2004_e.pdf

Interpol concern over UK borders / BBC News, 1 Dec 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4058427.stm
"The head of Interpol has told of his 'surprise' at shortcomings in the passport controls at UK borders.
Ron Noble, an American, said he was not asked for his passport serial number when he entered the UK.
'It's been proven in every single terrorist incident that a fraudulent passport has been used,' Mr Noble told a House of Lords committee.
He said officials should record and check the numbers against Interpol's list of five million stolen passports. "

Preventing and Solving Burglaries Using DNA Evidence / NCJRS, Dec 2004

http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/207203.pdf
"DNA in 'Minor' Crimes Yields Major Benefits in Public Safety" (4 pp.) (NCJ 207203) discusses the ability to analyze DNA evidence found at high-volume property crimes and use the evidence to solve other cases. Additional findings indicate that biological evidence collected from property crime scenes can prevent future property crimes and more serious offenses."

Home Office to review value of child witnesses giving evidence by videolink / PublicTechnology, 2 Dec 2004

http://www.publictechnology.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=2167
"The Home Office yesterday launched a review of how children give evidence in court proceedings, in order to ensure that child witnesses are able to give their best evidence and receive the support they need.

Measures to be examined for effectiveness include witnesses giving evidence by live link to the courtroom, and the video-recording of children's evidence in chief.

The review will seek the views of Criminal Justice partners, academics and voluntary organisations on how the special measures for child witnesses work in practice and whether any improvements can be made to help child witnesses.

However, the Government decided not to implement the final measure on video recorded cross-examination and re-examination because of the difficulties with the rules on disclosure. The review will seek views on alternatives to this measure as well as how the other measures work in practice and all other aspects of child evidence. "