Firstly, I'm not sure I buy that you ought to pay for involuntary detention, regardless. You were forced to be there against your will; the government made the mistake and ought to pay for the costs. Furthermore, if victims of miscarriage of justice are charged that fee then why is it not charged to the guilty too? I don't see how this is at all consistent. If you have the attitude that prison shouldn't be a free ride (I'd disagree that it is; I think loss of freedom and the work normally assigned to prisoners can easily be set against that), then you should be lobbying for the guilty to pay for their bed and board too.
Discarding that for a moment, though, I think I agree that Paddy Hill's case is not the most persuasive of those mentioned. How about Robert Brown at the end, though, who hasn't actually received full compensation yet?
I agree that I'd have liked to see more details of how compensation payments break down, but nevertheless for me the very attitude that you ought to pay for your own unjustified detention just beggars belief.
I thought the deal was that the fact prisoners didn't pay for board and lodging was set against their not earning money for work done while in prison?
Given that one of those prisoners went on hunger strike, it may well be that some of them also refused to work while in prison.
As for the one who hasn't received compensation yet, raising the matter before a final compensation sum is agreed is, as previously mentioned, surely the right way round to do it?
But, again, we don't know the full facts in any of these cases. Given those facts, they may not even turn out to be comparable to one another.
They're not forced to work, but if they do work, they don't earn any money from doing so. (Isn't having worked while in prison allowed to count in one's favour at parole hearings, by the way?)
(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-15 07:12 am (UTC)Discarding that for a moment, though, I think I agree that Paddy Hill's case is not the most persuasive of those mentioned. How about Robert Brown at the end, though, who hasn't actually received full compensation yet?
I agree that I'd have liked to see more details of how compensation payments break down, but nevertheless for me the very attitude that you ought to pay for your own unjustified detention just beggars belief.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-15 09:00 am (UTC)Given that one of those prisoners went on hunger strike, it may well be that some of them also refused to work while in prison.
As for the one who hasn't received compensation yet, raising the matter before a final compensation sum is agreed is, as previously mentioned, surely the right way round to do it?
But, again, we don't know the full facts in any of these cases. Given those facts, they may not even turn out to be comparable to one another.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-15 10:25 am (UTC)No. Prisoners cannot be made to work: forced work is slavery.
China is routinely criticised for doing just this.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-15 10:50 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-15 10:57 am (UTC)