SCOTTISH courts must dramatically reduce the number of people being sent to prison in order to save lives, according to judicial experts who claim the system has “lost its way”.

The call from lawyers, academics, campaigners, prisoners and their families, comes in the wake of the suicides of Katie Allan, 21, and William Lindsay, 16, who both died in Polmont young offenders institution earlier this year.

READ MORE: Questions asked after suicide at Polmont

Katie’s parents, Linda and Stuart Allan, last month launched a campaign calling for a review of the prison system to look at systemic failures. They claim their daughter – who was convicted of a drink driving offence – was bullied and subject to humiliating strip searches.

The National:

Student Katie Allan was 'was full of remorse'

Earlier this month it emerged that William had taken his own life 48 hours after being admitted and held on remand despite having been flagged up as a suicide risk. He was sent to Polmont against the advice of social workers because there was no room in secure accommodation after having been charged with possessing a knife.

But with figures showing there have been more than 57 suicides over the last 10 years, multiple experts told the Sunday National that the best way to save lives was to make prison a last resort, with community sentences used whenever possible.

Analysis shows deaths where a Fatal Accident Inquiry (FAI) has been completed include 11 of young people aged 25 or under since 2008, including several teenagers. More than half were on remand when they took their own lives and several committed suicide within days of being admitted – some within hours. A total of 27 died within a month of arrival in prison.

The outcome of a further 22 deaths last year is still undetermined but includes the suicides of Robert Wagstaff, 18 and Liam Kerr, 19, who died in Polmont within days of each other last January. Kerr was previously homeless and had spent time in the care system. A further 29 Fatal Accident Inquiries are outstanding on deaths in prison this year, including Katie and William’s. Human rights lawyer Aamer Anwar, who is representing the two families, claimed there could be as many as 12 suicides this year, the highest number for 10 years.

READ MORE: Twelve suicides in Scottish prisons this year, claims Anwar

Anwar said: “It clear to every person that bothers to look at the facts that locking up people for the sake of it does not work. It institutionalises violence, increases the chance of reoffending and it’s time our politicians had the guts to look at other countries which have introduced radical alternatives that have worked.

“Prison is not the right place to treat serious psychiatric conditions or send those who are no risk to the public. But prison life has become so divorced from this principle that both prisoners and staff are incarcerated in an unreal, filthy and frightening world which at its worst, is killing people.

“We have lost our way in Scotland, locking people up in dungeons of despair doesn’t rehabilitate anyone. It tries to extinguish the human spirit, prisoners are viewed as the enemy, violence spirals and increases the risk of suicide.”

The Allans met with Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf earlier this week. He promised that they would not have to wait for the outcome of the FAI – expected to take a couple of years – before lessons were learned.

The National:

Katie Allan's parents, Linda and Stuart

Linda Allan said: “Katie was not the first young person in Scotland to die in custody, indeed this could happen to anyone, irrespective of class, race, gender, sexual orientation or ability. So broken is our justice system, so shrouded in institutional secrecy, so covered in the dust from the endless circling wagons, we simply could not stay silent. It is time for radical change.”

Though the prison population has been gradually falling in Scotland over the last 10 years, it is claimed the number of people being given custodial sentences – 12,649 in 2016-17 – is too high.

READ MORE: Katie Allan's parents call for review of prison system 

Despite guidelines that guide judiciary to a presumption against sentences of less than six months, 3495 were given a sentence of less than three months and 4954 a sentence of between three and six months last year.

When early release is factored in, 7954 people were sent to prison for a period of three months or less – 63% of all people receiving a custodial sentence. The most recent available figures show 60% of those serving a sentence of less than three months were reconvicted.

PRISONS have also reported pressures, such as the increased use of synthetic cannabinoid Spice and problems with staffing. Last month an inspection report by the Mental Health Welfare Commission found that there was a continuing shortage of mental health staff at HMP Grampian with just one nurse in post “for some time”.

The National:

Backing the call: Councillor Jim Bollan

Jim Bollan, councillor in West Dunbartonshire whose daughter Angela, 19, died in 1997 while in Cornton Vale prison, in Stirlingshire, also backed the call for better use of community alternatives.

“When my daughter Angela died the Howard League for Penal Reform indicated only 1% of women who are in prison needed to be there for their own and the safety of the public,” he told the Sunday National.

“Until the sentencing policy changes and community alternatives to detention are the norm and not the exception then young vulnerable lives will be lost.

“The UK remains a backwater in Europe as to how the courts sentence young vulnerable people and it comes as no surprise that questions are now being asked as to whether the number of deaths of young vulnerable people in prison have been understated.”

Sarah Armstrong, director of the Scottish Centre for Criminal and Justice Research, said she was struck by the heart-breaking stories behind the prison death statistics: “There are so many Katie Allans,” she added.

She agreed that better mental health provision was needed in prisons but warned against knee-jerk investment into the existing system. “We need to be reducing the number of people going to prison,” she said. “Prisons don’t do well in providing for vulnerable people. Those put in prisons should be a threat to the public and they can’t be put anywhere else.”

Alison Payne of think tank Reform Scotland, which last year released a report calling for an end to “ineffective” short sentences, said there was often a misconception about the prison population.

“There is a danger when we talk about prisons that we get a picture of the very worst offenders. The reality is that the vast majority of people who have made mistakes,” she added.

Short sentences did not keep the public safe, she argued, and said people should instead be diverted to community justice programmes instead.

“Three months is not long enough for rehabilitation or education programmes to have an effect. It can have a massive knock-on effect on families.”

Deborah Coles, executive director of Inquest – a charity in England and Wales campaigning on state related deaths – said at its “most basic” reducing prison numbers was the way to save lives.

She also backed the call for an independent review into prison deaths so lessons could be learned.

“At the moment there are real concerns that the way Scotland investigates custodial deaths is falling short,” she added.

She claimed inquiries into deaths should also look at whether the person who had died should have been in prison in the first instance.

“William was very clearly an extremely vulnerable child,” she said. “Katie had committed an offence but she was full of remorse, she was a student, there was no risk that she would flee. She could have been given a very effective community disposal.”

Pete White, chief executive of Positive Prison, Positive Futures, spent several months in prison between 2005 and 2006 for embezzlement. He said that while his time in prison had provided a helpful turning point, through his work as a literacy tutor, he saw others struggling.

“The recent suicides are tragic. The fact is that a lot of young people in prison don’t really need to be there. Reducing the number of sentences saves lives.”

TOM Fox, head of corporate affairs for the Scottish Prison Service, said: “The number of people who have tragically taken their lives has remained stable over the years.

“It’s not the case that they have leapt up or that we have tried to conceal the figures. These are available on our website.”

He insisted staff went to “extreme lengths” to support vulnerable prisoners sent to prison by the courts and often saved lives.

The prison service was working to create better solutions for women, he insisted – including a replacement for Cornton Vale, where women will be placed in small units with links to the community. It is due to be operational by 2020.

“But there are also a lot of very troubled men in the system,” he added. “There are a number who have never been the recipients of unconditional love – they have had multiple bereavements, experienced trauma and seen things that most people will never witness.”

A spokesperson for the Scottish Sentencing Council said new guiding principles were due to come into force on November 26, while claiming individual sentences were a matter for the presiding judge.

“This states that the core principle of sentencing in Scotland is fairness and proportionality and that, among other things, this requires that sentencing should be no more severe than is necessary to achieve the appropriate purposes of sentencing in each case,” he added.

A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “As the First Minister made clear this week responding to the deaths of two young people in custody, we are determined that any lessons that need to be learned will be learned, and that all appropriate agencies must look closely at what happened.

“We are considering what steps to take to ensure the best possible standards of care for those young people in our prison estate.”