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Youth custody numbers fall to lowest level since the creation of the YJB

The number of under-18s in custody has fallen to below 1,700 for the first time since the Youth Justice Board was created in 1998, latest figures released by the Ministry of Justice have shown.

At the end of June a total of 1,690 under-18s were in secure children’s homes, secure training centres or young offender institutions, compared to 1,744 at the end of the previous month, a fall of 54.

The custodial population including 18-year-olds stood at 1,868 at the end of June compared to 1,941 the previous month, a fall of 73.

Tim Bateman, criminologist at the University of Bedfordshire, said he believes the ongoing reduction may be down to the introduction of police targets to reduce the number of first time entrants to the youth justice system.

This, he says, has delayed the age many young people first have contact with the youth justice system or end up in court.

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