Terrorists to take lie detector tests to prove they are not planning to carry out another attack

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Convicted terrorists could be made to take lie detector tests to prove they are not planning to carry out another attack.

Government plans to introduce polygraph testing will form part of an overhaul of the way such offenders are punished and monitored.

The Home Office and the Ministry of Justice described the moves, which include lie detector testing to prove offenders have reformed, as a "major shift" in the UK's approach to the sentencing and management of terrorist offenders.

Vigil for victims of London Bridge terror attack

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Terrorists deemed not to be a risk would have to serve two-thirds of their sentence before the Parole Board could consider them for release.

Jonathan Hall QC, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, will also review the way in which agencies like the police, probation and security services investigate and monitor terrorists - known as Multi Agency Public Protection Arrangements (Mappa).

Extremist: Usman Khan, who killed two people after his release, had attended deradicalisation scheme
West Midlands Police/PA Wire

Home Secretary Priti Patel said: "The senseless terror attack at Fishmongers' Hall in November confronted us with some hard truths about how we deal with terrorist offenders, which is why we immediately announced a review into sentencing and licence conditions, to do whatever is necessary to stop these sickening attacks from taking place.

"Today we are delivering on those promises."

Justice Secretary Robert Buckland said: "Terrorists pose a great risk to our society and our way of life, which is why we must bring them to justice and keep the public safe."

Plans for the Bill were first mooted shortly after the November attack, which claimed the lives of Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt.

Also among the Government's plans:

 

- Force dangerous terrorists who receive extended determinate sentences to serve the whole time behind bars.

- Ensure those convicted of serious offences such as preparing acts of terrorism or directing a terrorist organisation would have to spend a minimum of 14 years in jail.

- Scrap early release from jail for those classed as dangerous and handed extended determinate sentences - in which criminals have to spend longer on licence after prison.

- Double the number of counter terrorism probation officers.

- Make more places available in probation hostels so authorities can monitor terrorists in the weeks after they are released from prison.

- Increase counter-terrorism policing funding by £90 million year-on-year for the coming year to £906 million.

- Give an immediate £500,000 cash injection for support for victims of terrorism and a review of services available.

- Provide more specialist psychologists and trained imams who help to assess the risk of radicalised offenders.

- Offer more training for front-line prison and probation staff to identify and challenge extremism behind bars and on licence.

At the time Mr Merritt's father Dave hit out at Boris Johnson, accusing him of seeing an opportunity to score political points during the general election in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Khan, a 28-year-old British national from Staffordshire, had been released from prison on licence in December 2018, halfway through a 16-year prison sentence after he was convicted of terror offences in February 2012.

He was part of an al Qaida-inspired terror group, linked to radical preacher Anjem Choudary, that plotted to bomb the London Stock Exchange and build a terrorist training camp on land in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir owned by his family.

Staffordshire Police is being investigated by the Independent Office for Police Conduct for its role in managing Khan.

In the year to the end of September, there were 44 convictions for terrorism offences, with 17 offenders being sent to jail for between four and 10 years, the Government said.

Five were jailed for 10 years or more and one was handed a life sentence.

Around 245 convicted terrorists were freed from jail between 2012 and 2019.

Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said the announcement of a security overhaul was "an admission of failure" by the Government.

"Major terrorist outrages have occurred all too frequently, including attacks by perpetrators who were known to the security services," she said.

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokeswoman Christine Jardine said judges already had the power to lock up terrorists for life while polygraphs were "not accurate or reliable enough" for such critical decisions.

"We will continue to oppose authoritarian laws that do little to make us safer, but a lot to undermine essential British freedoms," she said.

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