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1908 Crime Prevention Act

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Prevention of Crime Act, 1908.

[8 EDW. 7. OH. 59.]

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS. A.D. 1908.

FART I.
REFORMATION OF YOUNG OFFENDERS.
Section.
1. Power of court to pass sentence of detention in Borstal
Institution.
2. Application to reformatory school offerices.
3. Power to transfer from prison to Borstal Institution.
4. Establishment of Borstal Institutions.
5. Power to release on licence.
6. Supervision after expiration of term of sentence.
7. Transfer of incorrigibles, &c. to prison.
8, Treasury contributions towards expenses of societies
assisting, &c. persons discharged from Borstal Insti-
tutions.
9. Removal from one part of the United Kingdom to
another.

PART II.
DETENTION OF HABITUAL CRIMINALS.

10. Power of court to pass sentence of preventive detention


in addition to penal servitude.
11. Appeal against sentence to Court of Criminal Appeal.
12. Power in certain cases to commute penal servitude to
preventive detention.
13. Detention in prison of persons undergoing preventive
detention.
14. Power to discharge on licence.
15. Provisions as to persons placed out on licence.
16. Power to discharge absolutely.
A 1
[OFf. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [8 7.]

A.D. 1908. PART III.


GENERAL.
Section.
17. Application to Scotland.
18. Application to Ireland.
19. Short title and commencement.
SCHEDULE.

2
[8 EDW. 7.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [Cu. 59.]

CHAPTER 59.
An Act to make better provision for the prevention A.D. 1908.
of crime, and for that purpose to provide for the
ref ormation of Young Offenders and the prolonged
detention of Habitual Criminals, and for other purposes
incidental thereto. [21st December 1908.]
it enacted by the King's most Excellent Majesty, by and
B Ewith the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and
Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled,
and by the authority of the same, as follows:

PART I.
REFORMATION OF YOUNG OFFENDERS.

1.—(1) Where a person is convicted on indictment of an Power of court


offence for which he is liable to be sentenced to penal servitude to pass sen-
tence of deten-
or imprisonment, and it appears to the court— tion in Borstal
InsOtution.
(a) that the person is not less than sixteen nor more than
twenty-one years of age; and
(b) that, by reason of his criminal habits or tendencies, or
association with persons oF bad character, it is expe-
dient that he should be subject to detention for such
term and, under such instruction and discipline as
appears most conducive to his reformation and the
repression of crime;
it shall be lawful for the court, in lieu of passing a sentence of
penal servitude or imprisonment, to pass a sentence of detention
under penal discipline in a Borstal Institution for a term 'of
not less than one year nor more than three years:
Provided that, before passing such a sentence, the court shall
consider any report or representations which may be made to it
by or on behalf of the Prison Commissioners as to the suitability
of the case for treatment in a Borstal Institution, and shall be
satisfied that the character, state of health, and mental condition
of the offender, and the other circumstances of the case, are
A2 3
[OH. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [8 Eow. 7.]

A.D. 1908. such that the offender is likely to profit by such instruction and
— discipline as aforesaid.
(2) The Secretary of State may by order direct that this
section shall extend to persons apparently under such age not
exceeding the age of twenty-three as may be specified in the
order, and upon such an order being made this section shall,
whilst the order is in force, have effect as if the specified age
were substituted for "twenty-one":
Provided that such an order shall not be made until a draft
thereof has lain before each House of Parliament for not less
than thirty days during the session of Parliament, and if either
House, before the expiration of that period, presents an address
to His Majesty against the draft or any part thereof, no further
proceedings shall be taken thereon, but without prejudice to
the making of any new draft order.
Application to 2. Where a youthful offender sentenced to detention in a
reformatory school is convicted under any Act before a court of
summary jurisdiction of the offence of committing a breach
of the rules of the school, or of inciting to such a breach, or of
escaping from such a school, and the court might under that
Act sentence the offender to imprisonment, the court may, in
lieu of sentencing him to imprisonment, sentence him to de-
tention in a Borstal Institution for a term not less than one year
nor more than three years, and in such case the sentence shall
supersede the sentence of detention in a reformatory school.
Power to 3. The Secretary of State may, if satisfied that a person
transfer from undergoing penal servitude or imprisoned in consequence of a
Insti- sentence passed either before or after the passing of this Act,
tution. being within the limits of age within which persons may
be detained in a Borstal institution, might with advantage be
detained in a Borstal Institution, authorise the Prison Commis-
sioners to transfer him from prison to a Borstal Institution, there
to serve the whole or any part of the unexpired residue of his
sentence, and whilst detained in, or placed out on licence from,
such an institution, this Part of this Act shall apply to him as
if he had been originally sentenced to detention in a Borstal
Institution.

IS
Establishment 4.—(1) For the purposes of this Part of this Act the
Secretary of State may establish Borstal Institutions, that is to
say, places in which young offenders whilst detained may be
given such industrial training and other instruction, and be
subjected to such disciplinary and moral influences as will
conduce to their reformation and the prevention of crime, and
for that purpose may, with the approval of the Treasury,
authorise the Prison Commissioners either to acquire any land
or to erect or acquire any building or to appropriate the whole
or any part of any land or building vested in them or under
their control, and any expenses incurred under this section shall
be paid out of moneys provided by Parlianient.
4
[8 EDW. 7.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [CII. 59.]

(2) rj[lhe Secretary of State may make regulations for the rule A.D. 1908.
and management of any Borstal Institution, and the constitution ——
of a visiting committee thereof, and for the classification, treat-
ment, and employment and control of persons sent to it in
pursuance of this Part of this Act, and for then temporary
detention until arrangements can be made for sending them to
the institution, and, subject to any adaptations, alterations, and
exceptions made by such regulations, the Prison Acts, 1865 to
1898 (including the penal provisions thereof), and the rules
thereunder, shall apply in the case of every such institution as
if it were a prison.
5.—(1) Subject to regulations by the Secretary of State, the Power to
Prison Commissioners may at any time after the expiration of release on
licence.
six months, or, in the case of a female, three months, from the
commencement of the term of detention, if satisfied that there is
a reasonable probability that the offender will abstain from crime
and lead a useful and industrious life, by licence permit him to
be discharged from the Borstal Institution on condition that he
be placed under the supervision or authority of any society or
person named in the licence who may be willing to take charge
of the case.
(2) A licence under this section shall be in force until the
term for which the offender was sentenced to detention has
expired, unless sooner revoked or forfeited.
(3) Subject to regulations by the Secretary of State, a licence
under this section may be revoked at any time by the Prison
Commissioners, and where a licence has been revoked the person
to whom the licence related shall return to the Borstal Institution,
and, if he fails to do so, may be apprehended without warrant and
taken to the institution.
(4) If a person absent from a Borstal lnstitution under such
a licence escapes from the supervision of the society or person
in whose charge he is placed, or commits any breach of the
conditions contained in the licence, he shall be considered
thereby to have forfeited the licence.
(5) A court of summary jurisdiction for the place where the
Borstal Institution from which a person has been placed out on
licence is situate or where such a person is found may, on
information on oath that the licence has been forfeited under
this section, issue a warrant for his apprehension, and he shall,
on apprehension, be brought before a court of summary juris-
diction, which, if satisfied that the licence has been forfeited,
may order him to be remitted to the Borstal Institution, and
may commit him to any prison within the jurisdiction of the
court until he can conveniently be removed to the institution.
(6) The time during which a person is absent from a Borstal
Institution under such a licence shall be treated as part of the
time of his detention in the institution: Provided that where
that person has failed to return to the institution on the licence
being forfeited or revoked, the time which elapses after his
5
[Cu. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. Enw.

AD. 190M. failure so to return shall be excluded in computing the time


during which he is to be detained in the institution.
(7) A licence under this section shall be in such form and
shall contain such conditions as may be prescribed by regulations
made by the Secretary of State.
Supervision 6.—(1) Every person sentenced to detention in a Borstal
after expira. liistitution shall, on the expiration of the term of his sentence,
remain for a further period of six months under the supervision
of the Prison Commissioners.
(2) The Prison Commissioners may grant to any person under
their supervision a licence in accordance with the last foregoing
section, and may revoke any such licence and recall the person
to a Borstal Institution, and any person so recalled may be
detained in a Borstal Institution for a period not exceeding three
months, and may at any time be again placed out on licence:
Provided that a person shall not be so recalled unless the
Prison Commissioners are of opinion that the recall is necessary
for his protection, and they shall again place him out on licence
as soon as possible and at latest within three months after
the recall, and that a person so recalled shall not in any case be
detained after the expiration of the said period of six months'
supervision.
(3) A licence granted to a person before the expiration of
his sentence of detention in a Borstal Institution shall, on his
becoming liable to be under supervision in accordance with
this section, continue in force after the expiration of that term,
and may be revoked in manner provided by the last foregoing
section.
(4) The Secretary of State may at any time order that a
person under supervision under this section shall cease to be
under such supervision.
Transfer o 7. Where a person detained in a Borstal Institution is
incorrigibles, reported to the Secretary of State by the visiting committee of
&c. to prison,
such institution to be incorrigible, or to be exercising a bad
influence on the other inmates of the institution, the Secretary
of State may commute the unexpired residue of the term of
detention to such term of imprisonment, with or without hard
labour, as the Secretary of State may determine, but in no case
exceeding such unexpired residue.
Treasury con- 8. Where a society has undertaken the duty of assisting
or supervising persons discharged from a Borstal Institution,
penses of either absolutely or on licence, there may be paid to the society
societies assist- out of money provided by Parliament towards the expenses of
the society incurred in connection with the persons so
from Borstal charged such sums on such conditions as the Secretary of State,
Institutions, with the approval of the Treasury, may recommend.
Removal from 9. Where a person has been sentenced to detention in a
oneprt of the Borstal Institution in one part of the United Kingdom, the
dom to Secretary of State, the Secretary for Scotland or the Lord
another.
[8 EDW. 7.] o Crime Act, 1908. [OH. 59.]
Lieutenant of ireland, as the case may be, may, as authority A.D. 1908.
under this Act for that part of the United Kingdom, direct that
person to be removed to and detained in a Borstal Institution in
another ]part of the United Kingdom, with the consent of the
authority under this Act for that other part.

PART II.
1)ETENTI0N OF HABITUAL CRIMINALS.
1O.—--(i) Where a person is convicted on indictment of a Power of court
crime, committed, after the passing of this Act, and subsequently to pass sell-
tence of pre-
tue offender admits that he is or is found by the jury to be a
1 . .
ventive deten.
habitual criminal, and the court passes a sentence of penal addition
servitude, the court, if of opinion that by reason of his criminal
habits and mode of life it is expedient for the protection of
the public that the offender should be kept in detention for a
lengthened period of years, may pass a further sentence order-
ing that on the determination of the sentence of penal servitude
he be detained for such period not exceeding ten nor less than
five years, as the court may determine, and such detention is
herein-after referred to as preventive detention, and a person on
whom such a sentence is passed shall, whilst undergoing both
the sentence of penal servitude and the sentence of preventive
detention, be deemed for the purposes of the Forfeiture Act, 1870, 33 & 34 Vict.
and for all other purposes, to be a person convicted of felony. 0. 23.

(2) A person shall not be found to be a habitual criminal


unless the jury finds on evidence—
(a) that since attaining the age of sixteen years he has at
least three times previously to the conviction of the
crime charged in the said indictment been convicted
of a crime, whether any such previous conviction was
before or after the passing of this Act, and that he is
leading persistently a dishonest or criminal life ; or
(6) that he has on such a previous conviction been found
to be a habitual criminal and sentenced to preventive
detention.
(3) In any indictment under this section it shall be sufficient,
after charging the crime, to state that the offender is a habitual
criminal.
(4) in the proceedings on the indictment the offender shall
in the first instance be arraigned on so much only of the
indictment as charges the crime, and if on arraignment he
pleads guilty or is found guilty by the jury, the jury shall,
unless he pleads guilty to being a habitual criminal, be charged
to inquire whether he is a habitual criminal, and in that case it
shall not be necessary to swear the jury again:
Provided that a charge of being a habitual criminal shall
not be inserted in an indictment—
(a) without the consent of the Director of Public Prosecu-
tions ; and
7
[Cii. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [S 7]
A,.D. 1908. (b) unless not less than seven days' notice has been given to
-— the proper officer of the court by which the offender
is to be tried, and to the offender, that it is intended
to insert such a charge;
and the notice to the offender shall specify the previous convic-
tions and the other grounds upon which it is intended to found
the charge.
(5) Without prejudice to any right of the accused to tender
evidence as to his character and repute, evidence of character
and repute may, if the court thinks fit, be admitted as evidence
on the question whether the accused is or is not leading
persistently a dishonest or criminal life.
(6) For the purposes of this section the expression "crime"
34 & 35 has the same meaning as in the Prevention of Crimes Act, 1871,
e. 112.
and the definition of "crime" in that Act, set out in the schedule
to this Act, shall apply accordingly.
Appeal against 11. A person sentenced to preventive detention may, not-
withstanding anything in the Criminal Appeal Act, 1907, appeal
nal Appeal. against the sentence without the leave of the Court of Criminal
7 Edw. 7. c. 23. Appeal.
Power in cer- 12. Where a person has been sentenced, whether before or
after the passing of this Act, to penal servitude for a term of five
servitude to years or upwards, and he appears to the Secretary of State to
preventive de- have been a habitual criminal within the meaning of this Act,
tention.
the Secretary of State may, if he thinks fit, at any time after
three years of the term of penal servitude have expired, commute
the whole or any part of the residue of the sentence to a sentence
of preventive detention, so, however, that the total term of the
sentence when so commuted shall not exceed the term of penal
servitude originally awarded.
Detention in 13.—(1) The sentence of preventive detention shall take
prison of per- effect immediately on the determination of the sentence of penal
- servitude, whether that sentence is determined by effluxion of
tive detention, time or by order of the Secretary of State at such earlier date
as the Secretary of State, having regard to the circumstances of
the case and in particular to the time at which the convict, if
sentenced to penal servitude alone, would ordinarily have been
licensed to be at large, may direct.
(2) Persons undergoing preventive detention' shall be con-
fined in any prison or part of a prison which the Secretary of
State may set apart for the purpose, and shall (save as otherwise
provided by this Act) be subject to the law for the time being
in force with respect to penal servitude as if they were under-
going penal servitude:
Provided that the rules applicable to convicts and convict
prisons shall apply to persons undergoing preventive detention,
and to the prisons or parts of prisons in which they are detained,
subject to such modifications in the direction of a less rigorous
treatment as the Secretary of State may prescribe by prison rules
62 Vict. within the meaning of the Prison Act, 1898.
S
[8 EDW. 7.] Prevention ol Crime Act, 1908. [Cii. 59.]

(3) Persons undergoing preventive detentioii shall be sub- A.D.


jected to such disciplinary and reformative influences, and shall
be employed on such work as may be best fitted to make them
able and willing to earn an honest livelihood on discharge.
(4) The Secretary of State shall appoint for every such
prison or part of a prison so set apart a board of visitors, of
whom not less than two shall be justices of the peace, with
such powers and duties as he may prescribe by such prison
rules as aforesaid.
14:.(1) The Secretary of State shall, once at least in every Power to ffis-
three years during which a person is detained in custody under L
a sentence of preventive detention, take into consideration the
condition, history, and circumstances of that person with a view
to determining whether he shall be placed out on licence, and,
if so, on what conditions.
(2) The Secretary of State may at any time discharge on
licence a person undergoing preventive detention if satisfied
that there is a reasonable probability that he will abstain from
crime and lead a useful and industrious life or that he is no
longer capable of engaging in crime, or that for any other reason
it is desirable to release him from confinement in prison.
(3) A person so discharged on licence may be discharged on
probation, and on condition that he be placed under the super-
vision or authority of any society or person named in the licence
who may be willing to take charge of the case, or on such other
conditions as may be specified in the licence.
(4) The Directors of Convict Prisons shall report periodically
to the Secretary of State on the conduct and industry of per-
sons undergoing preventive detention, and their prospects and
probable behaviour on release, and for this purpose shall be
assisted by a committee at each prison in which such persons
are detained, consisting of such members of the board of visitors
and such other persons of either sex as the Secretary of State
may from time to time appoint.
(5) Every such committee shall hold meetings, at such
intervals of not more than six months as may be prescribed,
for the purpose of personally interviewing persons undergoing
preventive detention in the prison and preparing reports
embodying such information respecting them as may be neces-
sary for the assistance of the Directors, and may at any other
times hold such other meetings, and make such special reports
respecting particular cases, as they may think necessary.
(6) A licence under this section may be in such form and
may contain such conditions as may be prescribed by the Secre-
tary of State.
(7) The provisions relating to licences to be at large granted
to persons undergoing penal servitude shall not apply to persons
undergoing preventive detention.
9
[OfT. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [8 EliW. 7.]

A.D. 1908. 15.—(1) The society or person under whose supervision or


as
authority a person is so placed shall periodically, in accordance
with regulations made by the Secretary of State, report to the
placed out on Secretary of State on the conduct arId circumstances of that
licence.
person.
(2) A licence under this Part of this Act may be revoked at
any time by the Secretary of State, and where a licence has been
revoked, the person to whom the licence related shall return
to the prison, and, if he fails to do so, may be apprehended
without warrant and taken to prison.
(3) If a person absent from prison under such a licence
escapes from the supervision of the society or person in whose
charge he is placed, or commits any breach of the conditions
contained in the licence, he shall be considered thereby to have
forfeited the licence, and shall be taken back to prison.
(4) A couit of summary jurisdiction for the place where
the prison from which a person has been discharged on licence
is situate, or where such a person is found, may, on information
on oath that the licence has been forfeited under this section,
issue a warrant for his apprehension, and he shall, on appre-
hension, be brought before a court of summary jurisdiction,
which, if satisfied that the licence has been forfeited, shall order
him to be remitted to preventive detention, and moy commit
him to any prison within the jurisdiction of the court until lie
can conveniently be removed to a prison or part of a prison set
apart for the purpose of the confinement of persons undergoing
preventive detention.
(5) The time during which a person is absent from prison
under such a licence shall be treated as part of the term of
preventive detention:
Provided that, where such person has failed to return on
the licence being forfeited or revoked, the time which elapses
after his failure so to return shall be excluded in computing the
unexpired residue of the term of preventive detention.
Power to dis- 16. Without prejudice to any other powers of discharge, the
abso-
Secretary of State may at any time discharge absolutely any
person discharged conditionally on licence under this Part of
this Act, and shall so discharge him at the expiration of five
years from the time when he was first discharged on licence if
satisfied that he has been observing the conditions of his licence
and abstaining from crime.

PART ifi.
GENERAL.

Application to 1 7.—(1) Part I. of this Act shall apply to Scotland (with the
Scotland. substitution of an institution under any name prescribed by the
Secretary for Scotland for a Borstal Institution) on and after such
date as may be determined by the Secretary for Scotland by
10
[8 EDW. 7.] Prevention of Grime Act, 1908. [Cii. 59.]

order issued under his hand and seal and published in the A.D.
Edinburgh Gazette, which order shall indicate the date on and
after which such an institution will be established in Scotland.
(2) In the application to Scotland of the provisions of this
Act, other than those relating to the removal of persons from
one part of the United Kingdom to another, "Secretary for
Scotland" shall be substituted for "Secretary of State," "Prison
Commissioners for Scotland" for "Prison Commissioners" and
"Directors of Convict Prisons," "the Prisons (Scotland) Acts,
1860 to 1904" for "the Prisons Acts, 1865 to 1898," "the Prisons
(Scotland) Act, 1877," for "the Prison Act, 1898," and "the 40 & 41 Vii.
for "a court of summary jurisdiction," and the expres- c•

sion " crime," used in reference to previous convictions, means a


crime of which a person has been convicted on indictment.
(3) Subsection (4) of section ten shall not apply to
Scotland, and in lieu thereof the following subsection shall
be substituted :—
"In the proceedings under an indictment in pursuance of
this section, where at the first diet the accused has pleaded not
guilty, at the second diet, unless the accused then pleads guilty,
the jury shall in the first instance be sworn, and the accused
shall then be tried on so much only of the indictment as charges
the said crime, and, if he is found guilty, the same jury shall,
unless the accused admits that he is a habitual criminal, be
re-sworn to inquire whether he is a habitual criminal. Where
at the first diet the accused pleads guilty of the crime, but denies
that he is a habitual criminal, the plea shall be recorded, and at
the second diet, unless the accused admits that he is a habitual
criminal, the jury shall be sworn to inquire whether he is a
habitual criminal":
Provided that where a person is indicted under this
section the provisions of section thirty-one of the Criminal oo &
Procedure (Scotland) Act, 1887, shall not apply unless the c.
accused intimates his intention to plead guilty of the crime in
terms of that section and to admit that he is a habitual criminal,
and where the accused int.imates his intention as aforesaid
the sheriff shall remit him to the High Court of Justiciary for
sentence.
(4) Subsection (6) of section ten shall not apply to
Scotland.
(5) Section eleven shall not apply to Scotland and in lieu
thereof the following provision shall be substituted
"A person sentenced in Scotland to preventive detention
may appeal against the sentence to a Court of Appeal which
shall consist of not less than three judges of the High Court of
Justiciary, and the High Court shall have power from time to
time to pass Acts of Adjournal regulating the procedure in such
appeals. Every such Act of Adjournal shall, as soon as may be,
be laid before both Houses of Parliament."
11
[CH. 59.] Prevention of Crime Act, 1908. [S EDW. 7.]

A.D. 1908. 18. In the application to Ireland of the provisions of this


Application to
Act, the following modifications shall be made :—
Ireland. (a) References to the Lord Lieutenant shall be substituted
for references to Secretary of State, except in the
provision relating to the removal of persons from one
part of the United Kingdom to another; and in the
provisions relating to regulations under Part I. and
to prison rules under Part II. of this Act;
(b) The regulations to be made under Part I. and the prison
rules to be made under Part II. of this Act shall
be made by the General Prisons Board for Ireland
subject to the approval of the Lord Lieutenant and
Privy Council, and the provisions of section fifty-
40 & 41 Vict. seven of the General Prisons (Ireland) Act, 1877, shall
apply to the said rules;
(c) References to the General Prisons Board for Ireland shall
be substituted for references to the Prison Commis-
sioners and Directors of Convict Prisons;
(d) References to the Prisons (Ireland) Acts, 1826 to 1907,
shall be substituted for references to the Prisons
Acts, 1865 to 1898;
(e) A reference to the Attorney-General for Ireland shall
be substituted for the reference to the Director of
Public Prosecutions;
(j) The provision relating to appeals to the Court of
Criminal Appeal shall not apply, but where any person
charged in an indictment with being a habitual
criminal is found by a jury under this Act to be a
11 & 12 Vict. habitual criminal, the provisions of the Crown Cases
78.
Act, 1848, as amended by any subsequent enactment,
shall, with the necessary modifications, apply in like
manner as if the proceedings upon such charge were
a trial for an offence to which section one of that
Act applies and as if the person had been convicted
of such an offence.
Short title and 1 9.—(1) This Act may be cited as the Prevention of Crime
commence- Act, 1908.
ment.
(2) This Act shall come into operation on the first day of
August one thousand nine hundred and nine.

12
[8 Epw. 7.] Prevention of Grime Act, 1908. [On. 59.]

SCHEDULE. A.D.1908.
Section 10.

The expression "crime" means, in England and ireland, any felony


or the offence of uttering false or counterfeit coin, or of possessing
counterfeit gold or silver coin, or the offence of obtaining goods or money
by false pretenees, or the offence of conspiracy to defraud, or any mis-
demeanour under the fifty-eighth section of the Larceny Act, 1861.

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FOR
ROWLAND BAILEY, Esq., M.V.O., the King's Printer of Acts of Parliament.
ISBN 0 10 513583 6

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