Yes, I am concerned about offenders who reoffend, whether they have been released on parole or have finished their sentence. |
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There's no evidence before me that this man is a threat to women and is likely to reoffend. |
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If there is any question that that person might reoffend, particularly involving children, then we would not accept them. |
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A parent who has lost one child to a mishandled gun seems pretty unlikely to reoffend. |
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It is not complicated: he will commit crimes, play the tough guy, impose his own rules in reception centres, escape and reoffend. |
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Public registers drive serious offenders underground, which makes them harder to track and more likely to reoffend. |
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They come out more likely to reoffend and then society's recidivism problem is worse. |
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As the number of criminogenic needs increases, so does the risk to reoffend. |
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We want people who are coming out of prison to be less likely to reoffend because they are the ones who actually create most of the crimes. |
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Those identified as high risk are more likely to reoffend, but not all of them will. |
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What I really want to know is how do we help people coming out of prison not to reoffend? |
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These reforms will lower the risk that people charged with serious offences may reoffend while out on bail. |
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As I said, what good does it do to put people in jail when they come out and reoffend? |
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Mr. Speaker, how many times have we seen a violent criminal get off with a light sentence only to reoffend? |
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These people should be equipped somehow so that they're less likely to reoffend. |
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Many offenders reoffend, especially those who do not receive treatment while in prison. |
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How well has the risk to reoffend been identified and communicated to the parole officers? |
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Even with those who reoffend, there can be a relatively good story. |
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In that way when they did come out they would be less likely to reoffend and it would make Canada safer. |
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The statistics, the social scientists and the experts who came to committee showed that the actual facts are that they are less likely to reoffend if they have had shorter sentences and the appropriate treatment. |
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When we put people in prison for longer sentences, especially when under the circumstances those sentences are not just, offenders actually tend to reoffend. |
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Provision should be made for increasing the financial penalty for employers who continue to employ third country nationals illegally or who reoffend. |
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However, it has been proposed that the resources go toward incarcerating more people, which will cost more, make them more likely to reoffend and make society more dangerous. |
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Each prisoner costs the state about £45,000 a year – yet almost two-thirds of those sentenced to less than 12 months reoffend again, most within a year of release since their social issues are often left unaddressed. |
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But two features clearly emerge from his chronicle. First, American courts, at least in big cities, are swamped by a flood of non-violent drug offences, most committed by addicts who continually reoffend. |
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While debating other bills, we heard that people under conditional sentencing or house arrest were less likely to reoffend than people who had to serve the entire sentence in jail and crime school. |
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We want rehabilitation that gives people skills so that they can become working members in society, not so that they are left without the skills to get a job and reoffend as a result. |
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All of us in the chamber have heard stories about individuals who have been charged and released on bail and during that time have chosen to reoffend. |
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If the government is so concerned about keeping Canadians safe, why, in goodness name, would it not allow for rehabilitation if a person does not reoffend, even though an offence took place in another country? |
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Everyone now knows that this chap would reoffend. |
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The aboriginal justice strategy was a success story, way higher than the traditional system of putting people in jail when they just get out and reoffend. |
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People who have been to jail reoffend when they are released. |
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If people go into jails and they do not have the appropriate rehabilitation, educational, anger management, personal and readjustment services, they will come out much more likely to reoffend. |
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They will try to find out more about his circle of friends, his family and school or work in order to determine the best way to ensure that he does not reoffend. |
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Not only was Toft eligible for parole, even though his prospects for rehabilitation were poor and he was a high risk to reoffend, he actually qualified for release into a community based halfway house. |
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Youth who met federal registration criteria were no more likely to reoffend, sexually or nonsexually, than youth who did not meet registration criteria. |
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