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Current Position:Home » News » Beverages & Alcohol » Alcohol » Topic

Mayor of London launches UK’s first compulsory sobriety ‘tag’ scheme for binge drinkers

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2014-08-04  Views: 8
Core Tip: The Mayor of London launched the first scheme in the UK that will enforce alcohol abstinence among offenders who binge drink through compulsory use of ankle tags.
The Mayor of London launched the first scheme in the UK that will enforce alcohol abstinence among offenders who binge drink through compulsory use of ankle tags.

The mandatory round the clock tag monitors alcohol perspiration in an offender. Today's launch follows a 2012 manifesto pledge by the Mayor and successful lobbying of Government for new sentencing powers in a bid to tackle alcohol related crime and disorder.

A year-long pilot of the scheme begins today in the South London Local Justice Area, covering the Croydon, Lambeth, Southwark and Sutton. It is anticipated that between 100-150 offenders will be sentenced by the courts to an 'alcohol abstinence monitoring requirement' where they will be banned from drinking any alcohol for up to 120 days and tested constantly using the new ankle tag.

Building on similar successful schemes in the US, and using tried and tested technology, the aim is to reduce alcohol related re-offending, ease the pressure on the police and the criminal justice system and make our streets and town centres safer, particularly at night.

Alcohol related crime is estimated to cost the UK between £8bn and £13bn every year and places a heavy burden on public services - 40 per cent of all A&E attendances are related to alcohol misuse. According to Public Health England, alcohol-related crime is significantly higher in London than all other English regions.

If an offender breaches the sobriety order, they can be returned to court where further sanctions can be imposed. These sanctions can include a fine, making the order more onerous by adding additional requirements, or revoking the order and resentencing the offender. Persistent non-compliance may ultimately result in imprisonment.

Offenders on the scheme will be carefully selected according to their circumstances, for example it is not aimed at people who are alcohol dependent and who need specialist support. However people identified as suitable for the programme will be directed to treatment advice services.

The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, who visited Croydon Magistrates' Court to launch the scheme, said: 'Alcohol-fuelled criminal behaviour is a real scourge on our high streets, deterring law-abiding citizens from enjoying our great city especially at night, placing massive strain on frontline services, whilst costing businesses and the taxpayer billions of pounds. I pledged to tackle this booze culture by making the case to Government for new powers to allow mandatory alcohol testing as an additional enforcement option for the courts. This is an approach that has seen impressive results in the US, steering binge drinkers away from repeated criminal behaviour and I am pleased we can now launch a pilot scheme in London.'

Metropolitan Police Commander Simon Letchford, MPS lead for alcohol related crime, said: 'We want people to enjoy London's vibrant night-time economy. However, the misuse of alcohol can result in disorder and anti-social behaviour that causes misery for others and we welcome any initiatives that tackle repeat offending.'

 
 
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