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Victims of Crime Trust director Norman Brennan lashed out at Tony Blair's record on law and order today and warned the criminal justice system was 'in freefall'. He called for 50,000 extra police officers and five to 10 new prisons to make Britain's streets safer. As Mr Blair was in Bristol delivering a lecture on the criminal justice system, PC Brennan said: 'As far as I'm concerned, the criminal justice system is in crisis and in freefall at the moment. Autocom serial changer identifian. 'You have got gun crime, knife crime, violent crime and the fear of crime the worst I have ever known it in 27 years of policing.

'Speeches don't make the streets safer, what does is a visible police presence and an effective criminal justice system that puts sense into sentencing. 'That means that those who rape, burgle, carry guns or knives should get an appropriate sentence which they serve rather than all the get-out clauses and early releases that they get at the moment. 'If the Government are interested in making the streets of Britain safer, they need to invest in a minimum 50,000 police officers and five to 10 new prisons.

'If saving money is the priority, the criminal justice system is going to end up in complete disarray. 'After nine years in government, the biggest deception I have witnessed as a serving police officer is this Government's promise to be tough on crime and tough on the causes of crime. 'It's not just criminals who want putting in the dock, it's this Government and this Government's record on law and order.'

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Let down by the system Mr Blair's pledge to rebalance the system in favour of the victim was given short shrift by one man who said he had been let down by the justice system. Farmer David Roberts, 48, told Mr Blair his crops and greenhouses in Frenchay, Bristol, had been damaged by a group of youths, who, although caught, were never prosecuted. Mr Roberts said they had caused £30,000-worth of damage, made his insurance premium rise and has lost him valuable profit. Mr Blair told him: 'It is precisely in order to make sure the views of victims are taken into account that we need to change the way that not just the Crown Prosecution Service but also the court system works.' Mr Roberts said he did not have much faith that the system would be changed as a result of Mr Blair's programme.

He said: 'The Prime Minister has been saying this for the last nine years but it's getting worse. 'I was the victim in this and the youth that did it got away with it.

'I would like him to put his words into action but I don't hold out much home that this will happen.' The family of a teenage victim of a paedophile said they welcomed the idea of giving victims more of a role in the justice system. The father of the 19-year-old victim said the 81-year-old sex offender who abused him had escaped a custodial sentence because of his age. The father, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said: 'I think it's very important for victims to have their say. They should have a much bigger role and a lot more support. 'I my son's case I don't think the judge fully appreciated the damage the offences have caused.'

Seduced by DNA 'evidence', but with precious little to corroborate it, a jury was quick to convict Farah Jama of rape. Julie Szego reports on a miscarriage of justice. Stephanie Johnstone, nightclub supervisor, had been doing laps around Venue 28, in the Melbourne suburb of Doncaster, picking up glasses and plates and issuing orders to staff, when at 10.50pm a security guard approached her. There was a problem in the female toilets near Bar Three and the DJ booth. Johnstone went to check it out.

Ordeal by jury: After serving almost 18 months in prison for a crime he did not commit, Farah Jama is now back home, having received compensation of half a million dollars. Credit:Julian Kingma Walking into the toilet block, she saw a woman's leg poking out beneath the door of the first cubicle on the left. There was no sound from inside. Johnstone bent down.

In the gap between the door and the floor she could see the woman sitting motionless on the floor. She tried to push open the cubicle door, but it was locked. She tried speaking to the woman, but there was no response. So Johnstone went into the adjoining cubicle, climbed onto the toilet seat and stepped on the sanitary napkin disposal unit. Springing up on her toes, she peered over the other side. The woman was slumped at an angle, her back against the wall and door, the button and zip of her pants undone.