Maximum sentence for stalking to double

6 Jan 2017 12:58 PM

Justice Minister Sam Gyimah announces plans to double the maximum sentence for stalking.

People who stalk victims and devastate their lives can be sent to jail for longer, the Ministry of Justice has announced.

The maximum custodial sentence available to the courts for stalking will increase from 5 to 10 years, and from 7 to 14 years if the offence was racially or religiously aggravated.

Ministers say the plans will help make sure the punishment reflects the severity of the crime and its damaging consequences on victims.

Justice Minister Sam Gyimah said:

Stalkers torment their victims and can make everyday life almost unbearable. We are doubling the maximum sentences available to the courts so these awful crimes can be properly punished.

I would like to thank Alex Chalk MP and Richard Graham MP for their considerable efforts in highlighting this issue.

We are also working across the criminal justice system to ensure mental health issues associated with these crimes are properly addressed.

The government will seek to implement the change through an amendment to the Policing and Crime Bill, currently going through Parliament. It will go further than the amendment recently passed in the House of Lords, as it will also raise the maximum sentence for harassment – from 5 to 10 years and 7 to 14 years if racially or religiously aggravated.

The move will make it possible for the courts to impose longer sentences in the most serious cases.

The government is taking further action to protect victims from stalking, including new protection orders to intervene early to keep victims safe and stop ‘stranger stalking’ before it escalates. The new measures will allow the police to place controls on perpetrators, preventing their behaviour intensifying while the crime is being investigated.

Notes to editors

For more information call the MOJ press office on 020 3334 3503 or 020 3334 3529