Mentions:
1: Laura Farris (Con - Newbury) New clause 88 provides for equivalence in sentencing for terrorist offenders between England and Wales - Speech Link
2: Laura Farris (Con - Newbury) by placing people on the sex offenders register and protecting them from working with children, but - Speech Link
3: Robert Neill (Con - Bromley and Chislehurst) It is right that there should be a power—I think we all agree—to prevent vile offenders from showing - Speech Link
4: Jess Phillips (Lab - Birmingham, Yardley) While in the 1990s we brought forward protection for children through the sex offenders register and - Speech Link
5: Kim Johnson (Lab - Liverpool, Riverside) amendments that would strengthen the Criminal Justice Bill, but other amendments seek to criminalise homelessness - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Marie Rimmer (Lab - St Helens South and Whiston) Yet children held in young offenders institutions spend most of their time locked up in their cells, - Speech Link
2: Laura Farris (Con - Newbury) Friend’s suggestion is a sensible one; we already publish the number of foreign national offenders in - Speech Link
3: Gareth Bacon (Con - Orpington) For offenders punished with suspended sentences or community orders, the reoffending rate is 24%. - Speech Link
4: Alex Chalk (Con - Cheltenham) Friend to look after the plight of people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Michael Shanks (Lab - Rutherglen and Hamilton West) Homelessness is up. Economic growth has flatlined. - Speech Link
2: Jonathan Gullis (Con - Stoke-on-Trent North) He took the knee when signing letters stopping us deporting foreign national offenders who have committed - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Angela Rayner (Lab - Ashton-under-Lyne) She joins nearly a million families at risk of homelessness due to the Deputy Prime Minister’s failure - Speech Link
2: Oliver Dowden (Con - Hertsmere) and Courts Act 2022 to give the police greater powers to deliver tougher sentences for more serious offenders - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Stephen Kinnock (Lab - Aberavon) backlog—are being combined with shortening the eviction period, which is leading to a staggering increase in homelessness - Speech Link
2: None Since 2010, under the Tories, removals have collapsed: the returns of foreign national offenders have - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Baroness Taylor of Stevenage (Lab - Life peer) and to hidden homelessness. - Speech Link
2: Baroness Scott of Bybrook (Con - Life peer) , within the next 56 days they are owed a homelessness duty by their local authority. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Nickie Aiken (Con - Cities of London and Westminster) What assessment he has made of the potential impact of the Criminal Justice Bill on policing homelessness - Speech Link
2: James Wild (Con - North West Norfolk) Friend consider bringing forward changes to the law so that electronic monitoring can be used for offenders - Speech Link
3: Laurence Robertson (Con - Tewkesbury) I understand that the Government are looking to further restrict the ability of sex offenders to change - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Alex Chalk (Con - Cheltenham) guarantee of 12 weeks’ post-release accommodation to secure that essential period of stability for offenders - Speech Link
2: Nigel Mills (Con - Amber Valley) What steps he is taking to increase sentences for dangerous offenders. - Speech Link
3: Janet Daby (Lab - Lewisham East) I recently visited Cookham Wood young offenders institution. - Speech Link
4: Bob Blackman (Con - Harrow East) Under the Homelessness Reduction Act 2017, there is a solemn duty on prison governors to prepare ex-offenders - Speech Link
5: Alex Chalk (Con - Cheltenham) out the steps prisons and probation services must take to meet their duty to refer those at risk of homelessness - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Baroness Newlove (Con - Life peer) serial and dangerous domestic violence perpetrators and stalkers as to organised criminals and sex offenders - Speech Link
2: Baroness Lister of Burtersett (Lab - Life peer) Women’s Rights Service, point out, the absence of a firewall, in the DAC’s words,“allows dangerous offenders - Speech Link
3: Baroness Fox of Buckley (Non-affiliated - Life peer) few years ago the British Transport Police stated that, because the BTP treats all people—victims, offenders - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Baroness Brinton (LD - Life peer) restorative justice is a well-established and evidence-based alternative that certainly does not let offenders - Speech Link
2: Baroness Brinton (LD - Life peer) of harm and other risks later in life, including going missing from home, alcohol and drug misuse, homelessness - Speech Link