Mental health illness prevalence in criminal justice system a scandal

9 Feb 2015 10:24 AM

The Home Affairs Committee says the prevalence of people with mental health illness in the criminal justice system is a scandal, as it publishes its report on policing and mental health.

Findings

The Committee’s main findings are:

Chair's comments

Rt. Hon Keith Vaz MP, Chairman of the Committee, said:

"The prevalence of people with mental health illnesses in the criminal justice system is a scandal. It is unacceptable that the police should be filling the gap because the NHS does not have the facilities to look after mentally ill people. The detention of over 6000 adults under s.136 in police cells in England last year is far too high. These people are not criminals, they are ill and often are experiencing a great deal of trauma.

The detention of children with mental health issues in police cells must cease immediately. Last year 236 children were detained in a police cell under s.136. NHS places must be made available for children locally.

The cost to policing budgets of police officers in custody suites having to deal with mentally ill people is huge. This puts enormous pressure on officers who are not suitably trained and is the starting point for those that are mentally ill to enter the criminal justice system. Many begin a journey which will eventually end in prison.

Street triage has been shown to work effectively but needs clear funding. In addition, transporting mentally ill people to hospital in an ambulance, rather than a police car, shows that this is a health problem, not a policing one."

Key facts

Mental health is estimated to be a factor in between 20% and 40% of police time.

At the moment, the law allows the police to detain someone for 72 hours if they think that person’s behaviour may be a risk to themselves or others, compared to only 24 hours if they think that person has committed a crime.

Detention under s.136

The police can detain someone using s.136 of the Mental Health Act 1983 if they think they may be a danger to themselves or others. The person is taken to a “place of safety”, in either a mental health facility, A&E or a police cell, so they can have a mental health assessment.

In 2013-14, 24,489 people were detained under s.136. Of those, 6,028 were taken to a police cell. The compares to 7,761 in 2012-13, and 9,000 2011-12.

The Royal College of Psychiatrists recommended target time for assessments in a hospital is three hours. The average delay waiting in a police cell for an assessment is over nine and a half hours.

Children

There are 161 health based places of safety in England, 35% of which do not accept anyone under-16 and 16% do not accept anyone under 18. In 2013-14, 753 children under-18 were detained under s.136 and 236 ended up in a police cell. 

Under 18s detained using s.136 are statistically more likely to be taken to a police cell than an adult: 31% of under-18s went to a police station (236 out of a total of 753 in 2013-14) compared with 24% of adults went to a police cell. (6,028 out of a total of 24,489 in 2013-14.) 

Regional variation in the use of s.136

There is a huge discrepancy between police forces and their use of S.136.The Metropolitan Police detained 1,645 adults under s. 136 but only 75 adults went to police cells. The Met detained 45 under-18s and zero were detained in a police cell. (The rest went to hospital.)

Sussex Police detained 1,355 adults under s.136 and 855 went to police cells. Sussex detained 45 under-18s but 20 of them went to a police cell.

Reducing the use of s.136

Some forces have made better recent progress than others in reducing the use of police cells under s.136. In 2012-13 Greater Manchester police detained 206 people, but in 2013-14 Greater Manchester police had got this figure down to fewer than five people in police cells.

In 2012-13 Thames Valley police detained 273 people in police cells, and in 2013-14 Thames Valley detained 270 people in police cells.

Deaths in custody, and shortly after contact with the police, and mental illness in 2013-14

11 people died in custody 2013-14, and of those 11, four had been identified as suffering from mental health problems.

68 people committed suicide within two days of release from police custody in 2013-14. Of these, 45 were reported to have mental health concerns (e.g. suicidal thoughts, depression). Three had been detained under the mental health act.

Further information