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Absconder given extra prison time | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
An inmate who had been on the run from Castle Huntly jail, near Dundee, for just 24 hours has had an extra six months added to his sentence. | |
John Cartledge, 41, was one of three inmates who absconded from open prisons in Tayside on Wednesday. | |
Simon Lister, 28, and 39-year-old Dennis Smyth are still at large. | |
Cartledge, who is serving eight years for a violent assault, and who had absconded from the jail in the past, handed himself in to police. | |
At Perth Sheriff Court he pleaded guilty to attempting to defeat the ends of justice by absconding. | |
The court heard that while Cartledge was on home leave from Castle Huntly he had an argument with his partner. | |
He left to stay with a friend and started drinking. | |
When he came to on Thursday afternoon he realised he was supposed to have returned to the jail the day before, and he turned himself in. | |
His previous conviction for absconding from Castle Huntly was shortly after he was transferred there, when he had been given leave after the death of his father. | |
Passing sentence, Sheriff Michael Fletcher said: "The courts expect someone who is sent to prison to stay there for the time they are sent there. | |
"I take into account, however, that you were out for one day and made arrangements to go back. The authorities did not have to find you." | |
Lister, who is on the run from Noranside prison in Angus, was serving a seven year sentence for assaults and robberies. | |
Smyth was sentenced to six years and eight months in 2006 for housebreaking charges. | |
These inmates are meant to be in prison, not wandering around unsupervised in the community Robert BrownScottish Liberal Democrats | These inmates are meant to be in prison, not wandering around unsupervised in the community Robert BrownScottish Liberal Democrats |
Calls have been made to review home leave for prisoners after the three cases. | |
The Liberal Democrats said the situation was "disgraceful". | |
Scottish Lib Dem chief whip Robert Brown called on Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill to look again at the rules on home leave. | Scottish Lib Dem chief whip Robert Brown called on Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill to look again at the rules on home leave. |
"It is reasonable for people at the end of their sentence to move to less formal surroundings as part of the process of preparing for re-entering the community," he said. | "It is reasonable for people at the end of their sentence to move to less formal surroundings as part of the process of preparing for re-entering the community," he said. |
"But the bottom line is that these inmates are meant to be in prison, not wandering around unsupervised in the community." | "But the bottom line is that these inmates are meant to be in prison, not wandering around unsupervised in the community." |
A review of Castle Huntly was ordered after a prisoner there, Robert Foye, raped a schoolgirl while on the run in 2007. | A review of Castle Huntly was ordered after a prisoner there, Robert Foye, raped a schoolgirl while on the run in 2007. |
He had been allowed out to attend an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting but did not return to the jail when he was due. | |
The Scottish Government said absconding prisoners were now no longer likely to be sent back to open prison. | |
A spokesman pointed out that the number of absconders from Castle Huntly over 2007-08, 59, was seven less than the previous year. | |
"In addition to the recommendations contained in the Scottish Prison Service review of the Robert Foye case, there is now a clear presumption against returning a prisoner to the open estate if they have previously absconded," he said. | |