News

Government denies 'large number' of false abuse claims against care staff

Posted: 17 April 2003 | Subscribe Online


The government has rejected a claim that large numbers of care workers employed in children's homes have been falsely accused of abusing children.

Responding to a report published by the home affairs select committee last November on an investigation into historic abuse in homes, the government says it "does not share the belief in the existence of large numbers of miscarriages of justice".

However, it backs the recommendation made by MPs that police procedures for trawling for witnesses should be tightened, but not prohibited.
Article continues below the advertisement



It also agrees that people wanting to bring cases against their abusers should not be excluded from the right to use public funding, but has reservations about the recommended introduction of recording interviews with witnesses or complainants on video or audio tape.

The committee's report concluded that investigation methods used by the police had led to a "new genre of miscarriages of justice" and recommended the introduction of safeguards to minimise the risk of wrongful convictions (news, page 6, 7 November 2002).

But the government says the committee reached its conclusions using a number of assumptions, including that significant numbers of complainants fabricated claims for dishonest motives.
Article continues below the advertisement



Other assumptions the committee is accused of making are that large numbers of complainants are either serving prisoners or ex-offenders and that fabrications go undetected throughout lengthy inquiries.

The Home Office response concludes that, despite the committee members themselves recording reservations about some of their assumptions, "they have nonetheless relied upon them significantly, without the weight of significant and consistent substantiation to back them up".

The committee has given "disproportionate" weight to the views of those who claim to have been victims of miscarriages of justice, the government concludes.


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts