CONVICTED thugs and sex offenders will be let out almost a week early before Christmas.
All eligible inmates should be released at least two working days before a weekend or public holiday, new prison guidance states.
1
Some lags are set to be released from their cells early this Christmas Credit: Getty
And all prisoners with a release date between Friday, December 22, and Boxing Day are set to be freed on Wednesday December 20, which will be six days early in some cases.
A source said: “The last thing we want is for some crazed stalker or violent ex-partner or to be given days of freedom in the run-up to Christmas, so it seems extraordinary that sex offenders and violent criminals have not been excluded.”
When Christmas last fell on a Monday in 2017, 505 prisoners were released before the end of their sentence.
The new guidance says that the policy must be followed unless there is a clear risk of harm to the public.
READ MORE UK NEWS HELL ON EARTH I’ve been in world's worst prisons - crime lords behead & burn enemies alive
PAEDO SIR Paedo teacher who fled to France with girl, 15, is working as baker after prison
It is despite Justice Secretary Alex Chalk insisting that violent and sex offenders would not benefit from last month’s scheme to ease overcrowding by releasing prisoners up to 18 days early.
It also means those with a release date between Friday, December 29, and Monday, January 1, will be freed the previous Wednesday or Thursday.
The MoJ said early release ahead of a weekend or bank holiday had long been a legal requirement.
It added: “We are also ending Friday releases for the same reason — so prisoners can access vital support rather than leaving them on the streets at risk of reoffending.”
Most read in The Sun
YOB CHAOS Cop 'engulfed in flames' in clashes with Legia Warsaw fans before Aston Villa tie
OFFLINE Hundreds of Three users without signal and internet as network suffers outage
DON'T YELL NELL Real reason Nella Rose has stopped arguing with Nigel Farage on I'm A Celeb
GLAM SHOW Kate & Wills receive standing ovation - after royals in ‘racism’ storm are named