Daily Express

Stop the children of jailed parents turning to crime like me says mum

- By Michael Knowles Home Affairs Correspond­ent

CHILDREN with parents behind bars need urgent Government help to stop them following their family into crime, a mother has warned.

Kaylee Kimber-Johnson, 34, said her mother once told her criminalit­y “runs in the blood” after she was arrested as a teen.

The Daily Express Break The Cycle campaign is calling for the Ministry of Justice and social services to install a system which flags up at-risk youngsters to the authoritie­s and a commission­er to protect their interests.

Kaylee’s mother and father Paul were both sent to prison and her partner was jailed in

2016 for attempted rape, sexual assault and assault.

Kaylee herself was jailed for fighting with her ex-partner while her first child was taken into care when she was 20.

But now Kaylee, from Oxford, is studying to become a social worker and has vowed to do everything to divert her children Erin and Elsie from crime. She told the Daily Express: “My mum said ‘crime is in the genes’. She was a shoplifter and my dad used to steal cars.

“And that was what I went in for – stealing cars with boys on the estate. I was first arrested when I was 12 or 13. The people around you become family. And that is what makes it so hard to get away because you feel like you are turning your back on them.

“But you are just trying to improve your life. It’s about breaking the cycle and showing children that being a criminal isn’t a good life.”

Around 310,000 under-18s have a parent in prison.

These youngsters are three times more likely to engage in anti-social behaviour.

And two thirds of boys with parents in jail later commit crime – with 25 per cent developing mental health problems, playing truant and under-performing at school because of the stigma of having a parent in prison.

A pilot scheme by Thames Valley Violence Reduction Unit in Oxford identifies children as soon as a parent is jailed. They then refer them to charity Children Heard and Seen.

It offers mentoring and activity days for at-risk youngsters. The charity helped Kaylee and her children but she wants more done nationwide.

She said: “Something needs to be in place as soon as a parent goes to court. It is like we are a lost cause.”

 ?? Picture: SWNS ?? New life...Kaylee with daughters Erin, nine, left, and Elsie, eight
Picture: SWNS New life...Kaylee with daughters Erin, nine, left, and Elsie, eight
 ?? ?? Kaylee’s father Paul
Kaylee’s father Paul

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