The Appropriate Adult Scheme is Failing People with Autism

Written 28th August 2015 by Olliers Solicitors

News this week that as many as a quarter of a million adults with mental illnesses, learning difficulties and autism are being detained by the police without the support of an appropriate adult does not come as a surprise to me.

Need to Intervene

I am a criminal defence solicitor who specialises in representing those with learning difficulties and autistic spectrum disorders. For twenty years I have attended police stations across the country to assist adults and young people who are amongst the most vulnerable that the police ever have to deal with. Yet time and time again I have had to tell custody sergeants  in charge of suspects’ welfare that their needs and rights are being overlooked; that they need an appropriate adult to be there too to assist with communication, check understanding and to intervene if the police are not following the rules.

It is not always an easy task for custody sergeants. Police station custody suites are amongst the most pressured work places you can imagine. They are extremely pressured for time, with many competing demands. And added to that is the problem that many people with learning difficulties and autism go through life – indeed learn to function in life – by masking those difficulties. Does the quick booking in procedure at the custody make it easy for even an assiduous sergeant do a proper job? I would say not. It needs to change.

Lack of Autism Understanding

But the problem does not just lie with the ability to spot difficulties. There is also unfortunately a widespread lack of understanding (some  might say cynicism) on the part of the police about learning difficulties and autism. In saying that I am not singling out the police – the problem runs throughout the criminal justice system. But what happens at the police station is crucial and any defence lawyer will tell you that it can dictate the whole course of a case.

This lack of understanding means that even when the police are made aware of an issue, they often still do not get an appropriate adult. I have heard all sorts: “he seemed alright to me”, “he’s at college, why did he need one?” etc. These are the cases that I often deal with after  the police station arrest and interview stage – when the client has been interviewed without an appropriate adult or a solicitor, or perhaps with just the latter (and the solicitor is not specialised in dealing with ASD either). In those cases, it can be very important to challenge the evidence the police may have obtained in those interviews by arguing that they were unfair to the client. Their autism or learning difficulties will be at the crux of that.

Home Office Report

The report commissioned by Theresa May has outlined the problems. Ms May herself has stated that the situation is “not acceptable” and has promised a review of its recommendations. These recommendations need to be implemented fast. The data obtained by the National Appropriate Adult Network (who wrote the report) has shown that those police forces that used an organised AA scheme were five times more likely to identify vulnerable suspects. With odds like that, what excuses can there be for forces not to address this?

Appropriate Adult Schemes

So forces need to get on with setting up proper AA schemes. Mental health nurses ought to be based at police stations. They need to be autism trained – as do the appropriate adults on the schemes. Forces  also need to change the booking in procedure, to make it more detailed and therefore easier for their officers to spot the difficulties of those they are arresting and detaining. This will be a thankless task unless police staff are also properly trained. In an era of tightly squeezed police budgets, that training needs to be given priority.

Let us not forget why the right to an appropriate adult was introduced by law in the first place: to lessen the risk of miscarriages of justice. Surely no one wants those. Not even a Ministry of Justice under the treasury’s cosh.

Written by Alex Preston, criminal defence solicitor. At Olliers Solicitors, all our staff are autism trained. Olliers provide representation at police stations 24 hours per day, 7 days a week. Should you require advice or representation please contact us on 0161 8341515.

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