Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Frightening scale of reoffending revealed: 148,000 criminals caught this year had at least FIFTEEN previous convictions




Almost 150,000 criminals convicted or cautioned last year had committed 15 or more previous offences,  figures revealed last night.
The ‘frightening’ re-offending rates mean this group alone have been responsible for  more than two million crimes between them.
And shockingly, the number of such career criminals has increased by 14 per cent in just five years.
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Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said the figures exposed the abject failure of the criminal justice system to get to grips with repeat offenders and showed the desperate need for action to tackle persistently high reoffending rates.
Mr Grayling said the public – and the Government – were ‘fed up with crooks doing their time and going straight back to crime’. The Justice Secretary has proposed radical reforms to the Probation Service aimed at reducing recidivism among hardened criminals.
Charities and private firms will be paid ‘by results’ to engage with criminals and help them turn their lives around.
But his reforms have faced fierce opposition from unions – who are planning strike action next week – and probation chiefs.
Reform: Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said plans to privatise the probation service will save taxpayers millions
Reform: Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said plans to privatise the probation service will save taxpayers millions
Last night Mr Grayling said: ‘People should stop and think about what these bleak figures represent – too many devastated victims, too many wasted lives and broken families, and millions in taxpayers’ money squandered.
‘Simply put, the situation is grim and it will only get worse by sitting on our hands and doing nothing.
‘Our reforms will help us put a stop to this, for the first time making it possible for every offender coming out of prison to receive at least 12 months’ support and supervision.
‘And we will only pay for services in full where they are proven to cut reoffending, making sure public money goes further.’
The previously unseen Ministry of Justice figures show some 148,641 criminals with 15 or more cautions or convictions to their names offended again in the year to  March 2013.
That total is up 14 per cent in five years, from 130,153 in 2008.
This group are therefore responsible for at least 2.25million crimes – although the true extent of their criminality will be much higher, as the figures do not capture how many more crimes than 15 each had committed.
In addition, many will have carried out further offences which went undetected.
The statistics also show that more than half a million offenders with at least one previous conviction or caution committed a further crime in the same period.
That includes 95 per cent of those given short jail sentences of less than 12 months.
Under pressure: The Goverment is being urged to suspend plans to overhaul the probation service. Three probation trusts have said the plans pose a risk to public safety
Under pressure: The Goverment is being urged to suspend plans to overhaul the probation service. Probation trusts have said the plans pose a risk to public safety while the probation officers union is planning to strike

In addition, more than 350,000 of those convicted or cautioned in the same period had served some kind of community sentence.
Justice officials said the statistics exposed the ‘frightening scale’ of reoffending.
Experts say crime is increasingly committed by a small group of hardened offenders who return to crime again and again.
The previously unseen Ministry of Justice figures show some 148,641 criminals with 15 or more cautions or convictions to their names offended again in the year to March 2013
The previously unseen Ministry of Justice figures show some 148,641 criminals with 15 or more cautions or convictions to their names offended again in the year to March 2013

Peter Cuthbertson, director of the Centre for Crime Prevention think-tank, said: ‘These are appalling figures. Thugs are going through a revolving door of probation and soft justice and then reoffending time and again.
‘We need to do far more of what works – tough prison sentences. Locking up serious, repeat offenders cuts crime and protects the public.’
Under the new reforms Mr Grayling’s department will award contracts worth £450million to private and voluntary groups who will supervise some 225,000 low and medium-risk offenders.
The remaining rump of 31,000 high-risk offenders, including  dangerous violent and sexual  criminals, will remain under State control.
Criminals given short-term jail sentences, who currently are not supervised at all after their release from jail, will be given at least 12 months supervision and rehabilitation on release from prison.
This ‘Rehabilitation Revolution’ will, it is hoped, make a significant dent in reoffending rates.
The figures expose how reoffending remains persistently high – despite some recent falls – and  tens of thousands of criminals  continue to offend after completing community service or probation programmes.
Members of the National Association of Probation Officers (Napo) union are due to strike next Tuesday over the policy.
And yesterday the Guardian reported that the chairmen of the Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Warwickshire probation trusts have told the Justice Secretary the plans will risk public safety.
The Ministry of Justice has said that more than 700 organisations worldwide have expressed an interest in carrying out the work, including hundreds of British firms.
In a letter to the Justice Secretary, Jane Wilson, chairman of the Leicestershire and Rutland probation trust, said the current timetable had ‘serious implications for service delivery and therefore increases the risk to public safety’.
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Peacocking to the max! Lady Gaga quickly discovers the perils of her outlandish feathered headgear as she struggles to fit inside a car

She's never been afraid to push the boundaries when it comes to her outlandish sense of style.
But Lady Gaga discovered the perils associated with her eccentric headgear on Tuesday night as she struggled to fit into a car due to a series of enormous feathers protruding from her crown.
Now that['s what you call peacocking! Lady Gaga demonstrated her typically outlandish sense of style with a garish feathered headpiece as she stepped out in London on Tuesday night
The 27-year-old singer appeared to have channelled a peacock when it came to her rather interesting - and revealing - choice of outfit as she arrived to film her segment on The Graham Norton show in central London.
Now that['s what you call peacocking! Lady Gaga demonstrated her typically outlandish sense of style with a garish feathered headpiece as she stepped out in London on Tuesday night

Making a daring sartorial statement, the Applause hitmaker adorned her head with huge 5ft-high feathers that swept back from her forehead in a dramatic fashion.

But Mother Monster evidently wasn't content with leaving it there when it came to her outlandish, and flashed the flesh in a completely sheer top with only sequin tassle detail preserving her modesty.
The combination of such a high headpiece and teaming her daring top with no bra meant the pop megastar suffered a fashion fail as she attempted to get into her car.
Oops-a-daisy! But the star discovered the perils associated with her eccentric headgear on Tuesday night as she struggled to fit into a car due to a series of enormous feathers protruding from her crown
Oops-a-daisy! But the star discovered the perils associated with her eccentric headgear on Tuesday night as she struggled to fit into a car due to a series of enormous feathers protruding from her crown

Out of this world: The 27-year-old singer appeared to have channelled a peacock when it came to her rather interesting - and revealing - choice of outfit as she arrived to film her segment on The Graham Norton Show in central London
Out of this world: The 27-year-old singer appeared to have channelled a peacock when it came to her rather interesting - and revealing - choice of outfit as she arrived to film her segment on The Graham Norton Show in central London


Struggling to fit her head inside the vehicle, the New Yorker inadvertantly flashed a rather risque amount of sideboob as her skimpy top rode up to reveal all.
But Gaga could be forgiven for her sartorial faux pas, with her mind likely to be elsewhere given that her beloved puppy, Alice, had to be put down earlier in the day.
Revealing the sad news to her legion of loyal followers via her Twitter page, she wrote: 'My puppy Alice died. We had to put her down, cancer ate away at a little angel. My daddy is so sad, we all are, lost a member of our family.
The sky's the limit! Making a daring sartorial statement, the Applause hitmaker adorned her head with huge 5ft-high feathers that swept back from her forehead in a dramatic fashion
The sky's the limit! Making a daring sartorial statement, the Applause hitmaker adorned her head with huge 5ft-high feathers that swept back from her forehead in a dramatic fashion

Sheer daring: But Mother Monster evidently wasn't content with leaving it there when it came to her outlandish, and flashed the flesh in a completely sheer top with only sequin tassle detail preserving her modesty
Sheer daring: But Mother Monster evidently wasn't content with leaving it there when it came to her outlandish, and flashed the flesh in a completely sheer top with only sequin tassle detail preserving her modesty
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'I love being an entertainer but it is so painful sometimes to be away from home 17 years she held on, so many memories. Nothing beats family.
'I remember her laying my bed, she knew when I was sad, or when I was sick. I should have been there. I just pray Alice found her wonderland.'
Heading back to her London hotel after her television appearance, Lady Gaga teamed her sheer top and crazy headdress with a pair of flattering high-waisted wide-leg trousers, and the same towering platform heels she was spotted in earlier in the day.
Fashion fail: The combination of such a high headpiece and teaming her daring top with no bra meant the pop megastar suffered a fashion fail as she attempted to get into her car
Fashion fail: The combination of such a high headpiece and teaming her daring top with no bra meant the pop megastar suffered a fashion fail as she attempted to get into her car

What a calamity! Struggling to fit her head inside the vehicle, the New Yorker inadvertantly flashed a rather risque amount of sideboob as her skimpy top rode up to reveal all
What a calamity! Struggling to fit her head inside the vehicle, the New Yorker inadvertantly flashed a rather risque amount of sideboob as her skimpy top rode up to reveal all

From wood shavings to sea shells and steampunk glasses - the star has worn it all during her current promotional assault on the UK before the release of new album ARTPOP.
But the star took care not to come a cropper in the teetering PVC boots she wore.

The 27-year-old wore the black PVC boots with a plaid shirt and bare legs outside the studios, while on her head she fixed a baseball cap and sunglasses.
Sad times: But Gaga could be forgiven for her sartorial faux pas, with her mind likely to be elsewhere given that her beloved puppy, Alice, had to be put down earlier in the day
Sad times: But Gaga could be forgiven for her sartorial faux pas, with her mind likely to be elsewhere given that her beloved puppy, Alice, had to be put down earlier in the day

Careful Gaga: The 27-year-old wore the black PVC boots with a plaid shirt and bare legs with a blue baseball cap as she confidently walked along in the super high boots
Careful Gaga: The 27-year-old wore the black PVC boots with a plaid shirt and bare legs with a blue baseball cap as she confidently walked along in the super high boots

The stiletto boots were so high she put herself at risk of needing a second hip operation if she stumbled and fell.
Earlier this year she was forced to cancel a string of shows on her Born This Way tour to undergo delicate hip surgery.
Meanwhile, Lady Gaga has been named Glamour's Woman of the Year and sat down with Andy Cohen to discuss her feelings on beauty, Madonna and her own body image issues.
Born this way: Gaga underwent surgery in February, after which she cut a typically outlandish figure in a string of garish wheelchairs
Born this way: Gaga underwent surgery in February, after which she cut a typically outlandish figure in a string of garish wheelchairs

When asked whether or not she considers herself to be beautiful, the star had a very self-aware response.
She said: 'Not conventionally beautiful. I've always been OK with that. I'm not a supermodel. That's not what I do. What I do is music.
'I want my fans to feel the way I do, to know that what they have to offer is just as important, more important, than what's happening on the outside. I'm confident in who I am.
'Being beautiful is not so fun when you're in a business with all men. Because it can actually get in the way.'
Bad romance with fashion: Gaga never disappoints when it comes to her outrageous dress sense
Bad romance with fashion: Gaga never disappoints when it comes to her outrageous dress sense
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Belle of the Angel Ball: Rita Ora holds her own surrounded by a bevy of models in a striking gold gown at New York charity gala

Rita Ora may have found herself surrounded by a room full of models on Tuesday night, but the British songstress certainly held her own.

The 22-year-old looked a million bucks as she hit the red carpet at the Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2013 Angel Ball, held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City.

The benefit, in aid of cancer research, saw the city's sexiest women - not to mention some equally gorgeous men: Hello, Hugh Jackman! - don their finest gowns for the occasion.
Holding her own: British songstress Rita Ora stood out from the model pack in her striking gold fishtail gown as she attended the Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2013 Angel Ball in New York City on Tuesday
Holding her own: British songstress Rita Ora stood out from the model pack in her striking gold fishtail gown as she attended the Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2013 Angel Ball in New York City on Tuesday
Holding her own: British songstress Rita Ora stood out from the model pack in her striking gold fishtail gown as she attended the Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2013 Angel Ball in New York City on Tuesday

Picture-perfect: The 22-year-old's shimmering frock perfectly enhanced her golden skintone and platinum cropped locks, while she added a pop of colour with cherry lips and matching nails
Picture-perfect: The 22-year-old's shimmering frock perfectly enhanced her golden skintone and platinum cropped locks, while she added a pop of colour with cherry lips and matching nails

The Hot Right Now singer most definitely lived up to her song title in her elegant gold fishtail number, which gave the effect that it was dripping molten liquid and featured a draped gold beaded neckline.

Chunky platinum rings adorned almost every finger, while she a matching snakeskin clutch, earrings and bracelets completed the dazzling look.

Red talons picked up the colour of her glossy cheery lips and she played up her eyes with a healthy lashing of mascare and kohl liner.

She kept her cropped blonde looks in a contrasting yet complementary messy, wavy style.
Strike a pose: Karolina Kurkova led the fashion pack in her black column dress, featuring sexy cutout detail, which she accessorised with diamond cuffs
Strike a pose: Karolina Kurkova led the fashion pack in her black column dress, featuring sexy cutout detail, which she accessorised with diamond cuffs

Daring to bare: Model Jessica White barely protected her modesty in her sheer nude frock that featured well-placed white lace embellishment, capped sleeves and a high neckline
Daring to bare: Model Jessica White barely protected her modesty in her sheer nude frock that featured well-placed white lace embellishment, capped sleeves and a high neckline
Daring to bare: Model Jessica White barely protected her modesty in her sheer nude frock that featured well-placed white lace embellishment, capped sleeves and a high neckline

Model Karolina Kurkova keep it simple yet chic in a black column gown with sexy cutouts that gave the slim beauty some shape.

The 29-year-old kept her blonde her loose and added little more than a slick of red lippie and two matching diamond cuffs on each wrist.
Jessica White also proved her style credentials in a daring sheer backless frock that protected her modesty only with well-placed white lace detailing.

Two can play that game: Chaka Khan, 60 (left), and Debra Messing, 45, proved they can mix with - and even outshine - the younger set as they donned their finest attire for the event, held at Cipriani Wall Street
Two can play that game: Chaka Khan, 60 (left), and Debra Messing, 45, proved they can mix with - and even outshine - the younger set as they donned their finest attire for the event, held at Cipriani Wall Street
Two can play that game: Chaka Khan, 60 (left), and Debra Messing, 45, proved they can mix with - and even outshine - the younger set as they donned their finest attire for the event, held at Cipriani Wall Street

A vision in blue: The Smash star and mom-of-one looked stunning in her royal blue low-cut halterneck gown, while she wore her trademark long red lock in curls over one shoulder to show off her matching drop earrings
A vision in blue: The Smash star and mom-of-one looked stunning in her royal blue low-cut halterneck gown, while she wore her trademark long red lock in curls over one shoulder to show off her matching drop earrings

This Is HER Night: The songstress wowed the audience with her powerhouse vocals as she took to the stage during the evening's proceedings
This Is HER Night: The songstress wowed the audience with her powerhouse vocals as she took to the stage during the evening's proceedings

Voluminous capped shoulders and a high neckline added a certain amount of class to the 29-year-old model's highly-detailed ensemble.
Adding some colour to the occasion was Selita Ebanks, who was picture-perfect in a deep turquoise long-sleeved slinky dress with embellished shoulder detail.

The stunning model, 30, slicked her hair back and played up her eyes with a shimmer of gold while keeping the rest of her look minimal, with little more than a pair of dangly earrings.

Actress Debra Messing, 45, proved she can also hang with a much younger and genetically-intimidating crowd as she slipped into a royal blue low-cut halterneck number.

Fashionistas: Shanina Shaik (left) looked angelic in a plunging white dress with silver embellishment, while Alyssa Miller had nothing to be blue about in her standout short ruched navy gown with sheer train
Fashionistas: Shanina Shaik (left) looked angelic in a plunging white dress with silver embellishment, while Alyssa Miller had nothing to be blue about in her standout short ruched navy gown with sheer train
Fashionistas: Shanina Shaik (left) looked angelic in a plunging white dress with silver embellishment, while Alyssa Miller had nothing to be blue about in her standout short ruched navy gown with sheer train

Opposite ends of the spectrum: Model Angela Martini (left) looked like a mermaid in her backless frock, while Orange Is The New Black actress Dascha Polanco covered up with an intricate pink and gold patterned long-sleeved wrap dress
Opposite ends of the spectrum: Model Angela Martini (left) looked like a mermaid in her backless frock, while Orange Is The New Black actress Dascha Polanco covered up with an intricate pink and gold patterned long-sleeved wrap dress
Opposite ends of the spectrum: Model Angela Martini (left) looked like a mermaid in her backless frock, while Orange Is The New Black actress Dascha Polanco covered up with an intricate pink and gold patterned long-sleeved wrap dress

Still got that newlywed glow: Singer Pharrell Williams put his stamp on an otherwise mundane suit as he was accompanied by equally funky new wife Helen Lasichanh, who paired a sequinned dress with biker boots
Still got that newlywed glow: Singer Pharrell Williams put his stamp on an otherwise mundane suit as he was accompanied by equally funky new wife Helen Lasichanh, who paired a sequinned dress with biker boots

The mom-of-one also chose to forgo lipstick in favour of emphasising her eyes, while she wore her signature long red locks in voluminous curls over one shoulder, enabling her to show off her striking blue earrings in the process.
Legendary Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Chaka Khan showed that she's still got it as she struck a pose in her figure-hugging black sequinned gown featuring a short train and three-quarter sleeves.
The 60-year-old, who took to the stage to perform during the evening's festivities, wore her dark locks in tight curls and added some contrast to her dark smokey eyes with a pop of red on her lips.
Black is the new black: Entertainment Tonight reporter Rocsi Diaz (left) was elegant in classic black, as was Beyoncé's mom, Tina Knowles, who added some flare with lace sleeves and a feathered train
Black is the new black: Entertainment Tonight reporter Rocsi Diaz (left) was elegant in classic black, as was Beyoncé's mom, Tina Knowles, who added some flare with lace sleeves and a feathered train
Black is the new black: Entertainment Tonight reporter Rocsi Diaz (left) was elegant in classic black, as was Beyoncé's mom, Tina Knowles, who added some flare with lace sleeves and a feathered train

Underwear as outerwear: Sports Illustrated model Irina Shayk donned an interesting lingerie-style LBD perhaps more suitable for the boudoir
Underwear as outerwear: Sports Illustrated model Irina Shayk donned an interesting lingerie-style LBD perhaps more suitable for the boudoir

Also joining in on the model-fest were Russian Sports Illustrated favourite Irina Shayk, Alyssa Miller, who is best known as actor Jake Gyllenhaal's other half, Albanian Angela Martini, Australian Shanina Shaik and Swedish-born Elsa Hosk - all of whom were more than happy to flash the flesh in their stunning emsembles.

Providing entertainment for the evening was Pharrell Williams, who was Styled To Rock in a black suit with rolled sleeves and legs, polished black dress shoes and a white shirt.
He was accompanied to the gala by his new bride, model and designer Helen Lasichanh, who showed off her own unique flare for fashion in a black and emerald sequinned knee-length frock paired with black opaque tights, matching lace-up calf-length boots and a long gold necklace.
Here's looking at you, kid: Dapper Hugh Jackman didn't fail to impress as he took to the podium in a suave suit James Bond would approve of
Here's looking at you, kid: Dapper Hugh Jackman didn't fail to impress as he took to the podium in a suave suit James Bond would approve of

Proud as punch: The 45-year-old was thrilled to present his mother-in-law, Faye Duncan, with an award during the evening's festivities
Proud as punch: The 45-year-old was thrilled to present his mother-in-law, Faye Duncan, with an award during the evening's festivities

All in the family: The star was joined on the red carpet by wife Deborra-Lee Furness (right) and her mother, honoree Faye Duncan, all of whom went for complementary all black outfits
All in the family: The star was joined on the red carpet by wife Deborra-Lee Furness (right) and her mother, honoree Faye Duncan, all of whom went for complementary all black outfits

Hugh Jackman looked suave as ever as he took to the podium alongside wife Deborra-Lee Furness as they presented an award to her honoree mother, Faye Duncan.
The trio were in perfect unison in their black outfits, with the star in a dapper suit, his wife rocking pants, a top, an off-the-shoulder cardigan and platform peep-toe heels and his mother-in-law wearing a flowy dress with sheer overlay.
Not to be outdone by the hunky Aussie star, R'n'B hitmaker Usher rocked an old-school '80s look, complete with afro.
The 35-year-old U Got It Bad singer complemented his 'do with a standout glittering suit and funky bow tie and certainly succeeded in standing out as he was joined by pal Pharrell and music mogul Clive Davis.
Looking swell! Usher embraced the '80s with his afro and glitter suit, complete with funky bow tie
Looking swell! Usher embraced the '80s with his afro and glitter suit, complete with funky bow tie

Anything for a laugh: The R'n'B hitmaker looked a tad out of place as he joined music mogul Clive Davis (centre) and pal Pharrell - though at least they seemed amused with his get up
Anything for a laugh: The R'n'B hitmaker looked a tad out of place as he joined music mogul Clive Davis (centre) and pal Pharrell - though at least they seemed amused with his get up
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Girl, 13, digs herself out of a shallow grave after she is raped and buried alive by two men in Pakistan


A teenage girl dug herself out of shallow grave after she was raped by two men and buried alive.
The 13-year-old was snatched while walking to Koran lessons from her local village in Punjab and raped by the men in an isolated area.
Her attackers then buried her alive when they thought that she had died during the assault.
Horrific: A 13-year-old girl was buried alive and left for dead after being snatched while on her way to Koran class in the Toba Tek Singh region of Pakistan
Horrific: A 13-year-old girl was buried alive and left for dead after being snatched while on her way to Koran class in the Toba Tek Singh region of Pakistan

But she regained consciousness and managed to dig her way out of the muddy grave and flag down a passerby.
She was taken to a medical centre and survived her horrific ordeal.
According to the New York Post, her father Siddique Mughal told local police that his daughter had been taken.
But they initially refused to investigate the incident.
But they were ordered to arrest the girl's alleged attackers by the Lahore High Court Chief Justice's Complaint Cell.
Justice: Gang-rape victim Kainat Soomro was labelled a 'black virgin' and shunned by her rural village after she accused her alleged attackers
Another victim: 2007 Gang-rape victim Kainat Soomro was labelled a 'black virgin' and shunned by her rural village after she accused her alleged attackers
A judge from the Toba Tek Sing area, where the attack took place, has also been asked to investigate the matter.
Child rape is becoming increasingly problematic in Pakistan.
According to Pakistani children's charity Sahil, the number of children raped between 2002 and 2012 increased from 668 to 2,788.
One of the most notable cases was that of Kainat Soomro who was attacked by four men when she was aged just 13 in 2007.
She was shunned by her village after speaking out against her attackers and was labelled a 'kari' or 'black virgin'.
Despite her own family being ordered to kill her to rid themselves of shame, they stood by her despite threats of violence against them.
Her father and one of her brothers were beaten, and another older brother went missing and was later found murdered.
Despite her quest for justice, her alleged attackers were eventually acquitted.
She told the Press earlier this year that her family have 'lost everything'.
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Disgraced Shoesmith demanded £1.5million: As backlash grows over pay-out to woman at centre of Baby P tragedy, her greed is revealed




Provoked fury: Sharon Shoesmith will benefit from a total pay-out of around £700,000 after winning her unfair dismissal case
Sharon Shoesmith demanded £1.5million in compensation after she was sacked over the death of Baby P.
The revelation prompted a fresh wave of fury yesterday, as it also emerged that the disgraced social services chief wants to start working with children again.
Shoesmith, former head of children’s services at Haringey Council, will benefit from a total pay-out of around £700,000 after winning her unfair dismissal case.
Yesterday children’s charities branded the taxpayer-funded deal ‘absolutely disgraceful’, with one former government minister saying: ‘It stinks.’
A source close to the family of Peter Connelly, who died when he was only 17 months old, said: ‘It’s not right – she should not get a penny. And she should not be allowed to work with children.’
Communities and Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles condemned the deal and accused Haringey Council of ‘bankrolling a state-sponsored cover-up’ by refusing to reveal details of the six-figure settlement.
Shoesmith prompted further anger after she posted a statement online which said: ‘A final farewell to Haringey as my case concludes.
‘I wish those of you in children’s services, especially in Haringey, success, strength and courage in all that you do. Children have been my life’s work and I hope to continue in some capacity soon now that my PhD is almost complete.’
Shoesmith began studying for a doctorate at the University of London in 2010.
Baby Peter died in August 2007 after months of horrific abuse at the hands of his mother Tracey Connelly, 31, her sadistic paedophile boyfriend Steve Barker, 36, and his brother Jason Owen, 40.
The family had been visited by professionals, including Haringey social workers and doctors, 60 times.
Shoesmith was removed from her £130,000-a year job by Ed Balls in 2008 after a damning Ofsted report on Haringey’s children’s welfare services.
Tragic case: Baby Peter died in August 2007 after months of horrific abuse at the hands of his mother Tracey Connelly, 31, her sadistic paedophile boyfriend Steve Barker, 36, and his brother Jason Owen, 40
Tragic case: Baby Peter died in August 2007 after months of horrific abuse at the hands of his mother Tracey Connelly, 31, her sadistic paedophile boyfriend Steve Barker, 36, and his brother Jason Owen, 40
But she launched an appeal claiming unfair dismissal and in 2011 the Court of Appeal concluded Shoesmith had been ‘unfairly scapegoated’ and that her dismissal by Mr Balls, the then Children’s Secretary, had been ‘intrinsically unfair and unlawful’.
'Coming after the release of Baby P's mother, there doesn't seem to be much justice for this poor child'
Claude Knights, director of child protection charity Kidscape

Lawyers representing Haringey and Shoesmith had been in lengthy discussions since that ruling. She had been due to return to court this week seeking a declaration that she remained employed by the council, but that action has now been dropped.
A statement from Haringey Council confirmed it had reached a settlement with Shoesmith but that the terms were confidential and it could not comment further.
In the 2011 ruling, senior judge Lord Neuberger suggested Shoesmith was entitled to a minimum of three months’ salary plus pension contributions.
'It's shocking given the tragedy'
Care and Support Minister Norman Lamb

But sources familiar with the terms of the pay-out said her deal will cost taxpayers ‘approaching £700,000’.

One said: ‘She was seeking more than £1.5million. It is ridiculous.’
She will get a cash payment of between £450,000 and £500,000, but the package also includes pension contributions, plus tax and National Insurance payments.
Opinion: Communities and Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles accused Haringey Council of 'bankrolling a state-sponsored cover-up'
Opinion: Communities and Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles accused Haringey Council of 'bankrolling a state-sponsored cover-up'
The High Court ruled that the Department for Education must pay for some of the settlement. It is likely to be as much as half, according to government sources.
In an attempt to shame Haringey Council into revealing details of the pay-out, Downing Street said the Government would reveal exactly how much the department will pay when the amount has been agreed.
Government officials accused the authority of seeking to conceal the true scale of the pay-out and placed the blame squarely on the shoulders of Ed Balls.
A senior government source told the Mail: ‘This began with Ed Balls and Haringey covering up the truth of the case.
‘Balls compounded the cover-up by botching Shoesmith’s removal. And it has ended with Haringey covering up the pay-out. The whole thing is abysmal.’
Mr Balls said the pay-out ‘sticks in the craw’ but defended his behaviour, saying he would act the same way again over what he branded Shoesmith’s ‘terrible failure’.
He said: ‘An independent report said there were disastrous failings in Haringey children’s services, they said that the management was at fault.

‘Sharon Shoesmith was the Director of Children’s Services so of course it leaves a bad taste in the mouth that the person who was leading that department and responsible ends up walking away with, it seems, a large amount of money.
'This is the ultimate reward for failure and taxpayers will resent every penny they contribute to it'
Jonathan Isaby, TaxPayers' Alliance

‘In law I had the right to remove a Director of Children’s Services from his or her post if they had failed. The independent report showed clearly there had been a terrible failure and I acted in the public interest.’
Mr Balls said he was given legal advice that Shoesmith could be sacked without him holding a meeting with her – a claim that the High Court rejected.
He said: ‘Whether I had had the meeting or not, at the end of that report it would have said that Haringey and Miss Shoesmith totally failed. They failed Baby Peter and the children of Haringey, and I was right to act.’
'It stinks. This'll leave a bad taste in the mouths of taxpayers'
Former Children's Minister Tim Loughton
'It's absolutely disgraceful she's been given that amount of cash'
Mor Dioum, Victoria Climbie Foundation


I CAN'T FIND WORK AND LIVE ON BENEFITS, SAYS SHOESMITH

Since her sacking in 2008, Sharon Shoesmith has expressed anger and self-pity at her treatment.
In an interview earlier this year, she said: ‘What I didn’t know before, but I have learned over the past four years, is that you don’t recover from this – it stays with you. Your entire past is just wiped away and your future is utterly gone.’
She told Public Servant magazine: ‘People I used to know ask me what I’m doing now, and they’re shocked when I say “Nothing”. They can’t quite grasp that my life hasn’t moved on at all – that I can’t find any work and I’m living on benefits.
‘I used to have a £130,000-a-year job running my own department and was a national reference point for Ofsted for special educational needs, but no organisation will take the risk of employing me because of who I am.’
She added: ‘I was certainly no softy, but being held directly responsible for the brutal murder of a child was something that I found impossible to live with.’
She also claimed she wasn’t concerned about compensation, telling The Guardian: ‘I was never in it for the money. People will want to put noughts on it and all the rest of it but I was never in it for the money. I never discussed money. I wanted to win the case, I wanted the truth to be told.’
 

Not a shred of humility. Not a jot of contrition

By JULIE BINDEL, Left-wing writer and feminist
Incompetence: In her arrogance, callousness and self-righteousness, Sharon Shoesmith is a disgrace

Incompetence: In her arrogance, callousness and self-righteousness, Sharon Shoesmith is a disgrace
As a feminist who is firmly on the political Left, I often fundamentally disagree with what I perceive as the unfair criticism of those in the voluntary sector and the caring professions in general.
I count a number of senior social workers and other child protection professionals as dear friends and colleagues, and regularly pick their brains when I am researching a newspaper article about child abuse or vulnerable adults.
But in her arrogance, callousness and self-righteousness, one member of that profession, Sharon Shoesmith, is a disgrace.
As the director of Children’s Services in the London Borough of Haringey, she presided over one of the most notorious child abuse scandals in modern British history, when her chaotic department failed to prevent the torture and killing of 17-month-old Peter Connelly in 2007.
Yet Shoesmith has never displayed a single shred of repentance for the role that her mismanagement played in the tragic child’s death. She has accepted not a jot of responsibility, shown not a scintilla of humility.
Instead, after a public outcry, she has fought a despicable campaign against her dismissal from her £133,000-a-year director’s post on the instructions of the then Labour minister for children, Ed Balls.
Her self-serving antics have been grossly offensive not only to the public but also to the memory of Baby Peter.
Her job was to care for children, but she revealed that all she cared about was her own status and money.
It is a rich irony that, in her lack of compassion and her contempt for public decency, she showed precisely why she was so unfitted for her job.

Unfortunately, her long campaign has produced the result she wanted.
This week, it emerged that she has reached a settlement with the Government and Haringey Council, following a verdict from the Court of Appeal in 2011 that her dismissal was unfair because the correct employment procedures were not followed to the letter.
The judge in that case, Lord Justice Kay, emphasised that he did not consider Shoesmith ‘blameless’, and suggested that she might be entitled to three months’ pay, plus some pensions contributions.
Yet now, it seems that her settlement could be worth as much as £700,000.
Her job was to care for children, but she revealed that all she cared about was her own status and money

That figure is an absolute outrage.
If it is true, Shoesmith is being rewarded on an epic scale for her own incompetence. Despite lethal failings in her job, she has won a pay-out that means the 59-year-old probably need never work again.
Such a financial settlement represents an affront to justice and a complete inversion of basic morality. Essentially, she is profiting spectacularly from a sickening death that her own mismanaged department helped to cause.
The award is particularly insulting at this time of austerity, with pay squeezed and living standards falling.
Other workers, paid only a small fraction of Shoesmith’s salary, lose their jobs and receive hardly anything in compensation, even after years of service.
My own father, a North-East steelworker who suffered serious injuries in his demanding job, was laid off with a redundancy payment of just £15,000.
That is 47 times less than the package Shoesmith is estimated to have received.
Involved: Shoesmith has fought a despicable campaign against her dismissal from her £133,000-a-year director's post on the instructions of the then Labour minister for children, Ed Balls (pictured)
Involved: Shoesmith has fought a despicable campaign against her dismissal from her £133,000-a-year director's post on the instructions of the then Labour minister for children, Ed Balls (pictured)
Brimming with her sense of entitlement, Shoesmith will now have riches far beyond the dreams, not only of the Haringey teachers and social workers she used to employ, but also of the taxpayers who will have to fund this tainted settlement.
If Shoesmith had any humanity, she would give the money to the NSPCC. But then, if she were more humane, she would not have behaved like this in the first place.
What has been particularly nauseating about her conduct has been her absolute refusal over the past six years to give any apology for the death of Baby Peter.
Given the enormity of the systematic, fatal abuse that Baby Peter endured — at the time of his death there were more than 50 injuries on his tiny body — the public needed to hear her say ‘sorry’.
That is what other senior public officials have done in recent years. But not a  single word of contrition has passed  Shoesmith’s lips.
If Shoesmith had any humanity, she would give the money to the NSPCC. But then, if she were more humane, she would not have behaved like this in the first place

Instead, she has moved in exactly the opposite direction, parading through her courts and across the airwaves in her egotistical, misguided quest for vindication.
When she first won her appeal against her dismissal, she declared on the steps of the court that she was ‘absolutely thrilled’.
Those words again illustrated her monstrous lack of self-awareness. How could anyone be ‘thrilled’ by any aspect of the harrowing Baby Peter saga?
Shoesmith has failed to apologise because she refuses to take any responsibility for the episode.
The buck, it seems, never stopped with her.
During yet another of her offensive media appearances, she claimed that, ‘I’m not in the blame game. I don’t do blame.’
But apportioning blame is exactly what she does. Frontline social workers, other managers, the Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services and Skills (Ofsted), Ed Balls, and the media have all been her targets in this endless process of buck-passing.
Most shamefully of all, she even blamed her own deputy, claiming that the woman should have been more responsible because she had more expertise in child protection than she herself did.
But if Shoesmith was really anxious about her own lack of competence in social services — for most of her career, she worked in the field of children’s special needs — then why on earth did she take on the post of director in the first place?
This goes to the heart of one of the central problems with Sharon Shoesmith.
She is fond of saying that she has been ‘scapegoated’ for the Baby P scandal, but a scapegoat is someone unfairly saddled with responsibility for failure so that others can avoid the blame. But that is not what happened in her case.
For Shoesmith was extremely well paid because of the responsibilities she accepted. In return for that large salary, the buck was meant to stop with her. Equally absurd is her pose as a victim, reflected in her endless complaints about the vitriol she has suffered from the public or the media.
But the truth is she has been the focus of anger because she so noisily grieved for her own career instead of for Baby Peter.
Baby Peter is the victim of this saga, not the cold, calculating, greedy Sharon Shoesmith

Throughout her campaign of self-justification, Shoesmith has shown herself to be a typical, box-ticking bureaucrat.
Her career in management appears to represent the triumph of regulations over humanity and a victory of process over compassion. At every stage of this saga, she has been obsessively focused on procedure.
When the scandal first broke, she declared that ‘all the action taken was correct’, but, after Ofsted produced its damning report on her department, she did not dispute the findings but bleated that the inspectors had not followed the correct procedures.
Similarly, the entire thrust of her claim for unfair dismissal has been based on technicalities of employment law rather than any real concept of natural justice.
Indeed, in moral terms, it would be laughable for her to pretend that there was anything remotely ‘unfair’ about dismissing the boss of a dangerously dysfunctional department.
I am all in favour of employment laws that prevent staff being sacked or victimised by their employers, but Shoesmith has ruthlessly exploited the rules for her own selfish ends.
The employment tribunal system and the courts were never meant to cocoon useless directors from the consequences of their failures.
Baby Peter is the victim of this saga, not the cold, calculating, greedy Sharon Shoesmith.
She may have won her case, but my only hope is that one day she will gain some redemption by realising, however belatedly, that she should never have accepted what is effectively blood money.
If only she had invested as much energy in running her department as she did into fighting for cash, Peter Connelly might still be alive.
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ITV rejected me for live national service debate because I'm a girl, says Cambridge Union president.




Snubbed: Joanna Mobed was stunned when researchers from ITV's Alan Titchmarsh Show changed their minds her taking part in a debate because she was a woman
As the president of the Cambridge Union, Joanna Mobed is one of the best young debaters in the country.
So the 20-year-old felt more than capable of taking part in a current affairs discussion when a TV show contacted her.
But she was left stunned when researchers from ITV’s Alan Titchmarsh Show had a change of heart – after they found out she was a girl.
They explained that since the debate was about national service, they wanted two men to take part and asked her if she knew any male debaters instead.
Yesterday, Miss Mobed, a linguistics finalist at Murray Edwards College, said she was upset by the treatment.
‘Being a woman should not disqualify me from speaking on that motion,’ she said. ‘I was disappointed by the decision to take the programme in this direction.’
But last night ITV defended its decision, saying male debaters were needed because the discussion had been about ‘reinstating national service for men’.
However, the Bill before Parliament regarding national service also applies to women.
Producers of the daytime programme on ITV had wanted to pit the presidents of the Oxford Union and Cambridge Union against each other in a segment called the ‘Daily Ding Dong’.
After Miss Mobed – who is expected to get a first when she graduates next year – agreed to take part in the feature, she received an email telling her she was no longer needed.
The male researcher wrote: ‘This afternoon I thought I had finally got everything sorted and would be able to come back to you with the debate motion and all the details.
‘However, my executive producer has decided she wants the debate to be a specific way so all my plans have got [sic] out of the window. She would like two men to debate the motion, “This house would reinstate national service” so would it be possible for you to find me a guy who would be willing to take part? It would also be best if he was British.
‘If you could let me know as soon as you can if this would be OK and the details of who you would like to put forward.’
Miss Mobed, who has also represented the university in cross-country running and completed several summer internships in banking and finance, was upset by the email.
‘I was also a bit surprised by the request for a British speaker,’ she told student newspaper The Tab.
Change of plan: Producers of the Alan Titchmarsh Show had had wanted to pit the presidents of the Oxford Union and Cambridge Union against each other, but when Miss Mobed agreed to take part she was told she was no longer neeeded
Change of plan: Producers of the Alan Titchmarsh Show had had wanted to pit the presidents of the Oxford Union and Cambridge Union against each other, but when Miss Mobed agreed to take part she was told she was no longer needed
No girls allowed: ITV has defended its decision, saying male debaters were needed because the discussion had been about 'reinstating national service for men'
No girls allowed: ITV has defended its decision, saying male debaters were needed because the discussion had been about 'reinstating national service for men'
‘When debating, what matters is a person’s ability to think through and understand the issues involved.
‘Gender and nationality should not be a consideration in this matter.’
Conservative MP Philip Hollobone has proposed legislation that would make it mandatory for anyone aged 18-26 –regardless of sex – to spend a year doing charity work, caring for the elderly or serving in the armed forces. According to the Bill which is currently under consideration by Parliament, participants would be paid the minimum wage and would be required to live away from home, although accommodation and food would be paid for.
Academic: Miss Mobed is expected to get a first when she graduates in linguistics from Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge
Academic: Miss Mobed is expected to get a first when she graduates in linguistics from Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge
The Alan Titchmarsh Show is made for ITV by production company Spun Gold. Last night an ITV spokesman said: ‘As a TV programme we cast contributors in accordance with the subject matter.
‘For this particular item we wanted to debate the motion of reinstating national service for men and so we were looking to cast two men who would explore both sides of the argument.’
Earlier this year, the Cambridge Union became involved in another sexism row after one of its female students was subjected to heckles during a debate at Glasgow University. Since it was founded in 1815, the student-run institution has hosted many powerful figures such as Ronald Reagan and Winston Churchill.
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