header-logo header-logo

Piloting probation checks by video

17 September 2025
Issue: 8131 / Categories: Legal News , Criminal , Technology , Artificial intelligence
printer mail-detail
Face-scanning artificial intelligence (AI) surveillance tech is to be used to remotely monitor offenders, under a Home Office pilot

Offenders will be required to record short videos of themselves answering questions about their recent activities. The tech will fire instant red alerts to the Probation Service if the offender tries to thwart the identity match or gives other reasons for concern.

Prisons minister Lord Timpson said the pilot was ‘helping catapult our analogue justice system into a new digital age’. Its launch follows the introduction into Parliament of the Sentencing Bill, which provides for more community sentencing and fewer short prison terms.

The tech is being piloted in four regions—the South West, North West, East of England and Kent, Surrey and Sussex—before national rollout with added GPS location verification.

Law Society president Richard Atkinson said there must be ‘clear consideration of how rights might be violated and how they could be protected… And of course, it is vital that the Probation Service is adequately resourced’.

MOVERS & SHAKERS

CBI South-East Council—Mike Wilson

CBI South-East Council—Mike Wilson

Blake Morgan managing partner appointed chair of CBI South-East Council

Birketts—Phillippa O’Neill

Birketts—Phillippa O’Neill

Commercial dispute resolution team welcomes partner in Cambridge

Charles Russell Speechlys—Matthew Griffin

Charles Russell Speechlys—Matthew Griffin

Firm strengthens international funds capability with senior hire

NEWS
The proposed £11bn redress scheme following the Supreme Court’s motor finance rulings is analysed in this week’s NLJ by Fred Philpott of Gough Square Chambers
In this week's issue, Stephen Gold, NLJ columnist and former district judge, surveys another eclectic fortnight in procedure. With humour and humanity, he reminds readers that beneath the procedural dust, the law still changes lives
Generative AI isn’t the villain of the courtroom—it’s the misunderstanding of it that’s dangerous, argues Dr Alan Ma of Birmingham City University and the Birmingham Law Society in this week's NLJ
James Naylor of Naylor Solicitors dissects the government’s plan to outlaw upward-only rent review (UORR) clauses in new commercial leases under Schedule 31 of the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill, in this week's NLJ. The reform, he explains, marks a seismic shift in landlord-tenant power dynamics: rents will no longer rise inexorably, and tenants gain statutory caps and procedural rights
Writing in NLJ this week, James Harrison and Jenna Coad of Penningtons Manches Cooper chart the Privy Council’s demolition of the long-standing ‘shareholder rule’ in Jardine Strategic v Oasis Investments
back-to-top-scroll