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20 Crim. Behav. & Mental Health 1 (2010)

handle is hein.journals/cbmh20 and id is 1 raw text is: 

Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health
20: 1-7 (2010)
Published online in Wiley InterScience
(www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI: 10.1002/cbm.746

Editorial

No One Knows: The bewildering

passage of offenders with learning

disability and learning difficulty

through the criminal justice system




GLYN   JONES' AND   JENNY   TALBOT2,  1ABMU Health   Board, Cardiff, UK;
   2Prison Reform Trust, London, UK

The No One  Knows programme arose from an increasing awareness by the Prison
Reform Trust (PRT) of an apparently hidden problem within the prison system.
Prison staff, prisoners and their families were expressing concern that the needs
of people with intellectual impairments were not being adequately addressed. An
initial comprehensive literature review confirmed between 20 and 30% of offend-
ers have a learning disability or similar impairments of intellect and/or adaptive
functioning that interfere with their ability to cope with the criminal justice
system. They are a vulnerable group who may be targeted by other prisoners.
They are unlikely to be able to engage in and benefit from programmes designed
to address offending behaviour (Loucks, 2007).
   Since the introduction ofthe Disability Equality Duty (Disability Discrimination
Act, 2005), there has been a statutory responsibility on public bodies to identify
and make  reasonable adjustment for the needs of people with disabilities. This
legislation specifically refers to a number of neuropsychiatric or developmental
disorders including learning disability (the current UK term for mental retarda-
tion or intellectual disability), specific learning difficulties (including dyslexia),
attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (hyperkinetic disorder/ADHD) and autis-
tic spectrum disorders. It did not appear that these statutory responsibilities were
being met in prison (Loucks, 2007; Talbot, 2007, 2008). Reference to the existing
literature appeared to confirm a poorly identified and apparently disadvantaged
population (Loucks, 2007), despite recent major developments in services for
mentally disordered offenders, including prison in-reach teams and court liaison
services. These appear to have concentrated almost exclusively on the care of
people with severe mental illness rather than those with the wider spectrum of
mental health needs. With funding from The Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial


Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd


    20: 1-7 (2010)
DOI: 10.1002/cbm

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