A fifth of criminals in Wiltshire reoffended within a year of their conviction or release from prison, new figures show.

This is below the national figure but represents an increase on last year in Wiltshire.

A charity has blamed the challenges within our criminal justice system which struggles to "effectively punish and rehabilitate offenders".

Matt Randle, justice director at Catch-22, said: "Proven reoffending rates indicate that the system struggles to effectively punish and rehabilitate offenders, often due to limited resources and structural flaws.

"Systemic pressures such as staffing shortages, an overcrowded prison population, and ongoing impacts from Covid have further strained the sector."

Ministry of Justice figures show 2,058 offenders in Wiltshire were released from prison, cautioned or handed a non-custodial sentence in the year to September 2022. 

Of them, 439 went on to reoffend within a year. This included 26 under-18s.

The reoffending rate in the area stood at 21.3 per cent – up from 19.1 per cent the year before.

Across England and Wales, the rate rose from 24.3 per cent in 2020-21 to 25.8 per cent in the October 2021 to September 2022 cohort.

Randle added a "more rehabilitative focus" in the justice system was crucial to help reduce reoffending.

He said: "Brief incarceration often exacerbates existing resettlement challenges, and the limited rehabilitative provisions available can leave them in a worse position upon release.

"For low-risk offenders, non-custodial sentences have shown greater success in achieving rehabilitative goals.

"However, the lack of meaningful alternatives to custody forces judges to impose custodial sentences despite their high cost, both monetarily and in human terms."

Across England and Wales, reoffenders had an average of 3.8 new offences. This was lower in Wiltshire, with around 3.3 each.

On average, this group had committed 15.7 previous offences.

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "This Government is committed to a criminal justice system that makes better citizens, not better criminals.

"That has started by addressing the crisis in our prisons with the emergency measures set out by the Lord Chancellor last month.

"We are also strengthening the probation services, bringing on 1,000 new probation officers by March 2025. And we will be doing more to bring together prison governors and employers to help get people into work and break the cycle of crime.

"These statistics are a reminder of the scale of that task, but this new Government is committed to reducing reoffending."