Daily Mail

SHOCK RISE IN CRIME PROBES ABANDONED IN 24 HOURS

Police accused of giving criminals ‘green light’

- By Sophie Borland and Inderdeep Bains

HUNDREDS of thousands of crimes are being written off by police within only 24 hours of being reported.

The Met, which is Britain’s biggest force, shelves 36 per cent of new cases inside a day. These include more than half of thefts and burglaries, a Daily Mail investigat­ion reveals today. In Greater Manchester, 27 per cent of crimes are screened out this quickly, as are 28 per cent in Sussex.

The practice has become increasing­ly widespread as overstretc­hed forces struggle to prioritise their resources. Crimes are more likely to be dropped if they are judged as ‘lower harm’ or evidence is scant. Some constabula­ries will abandon a case immediatel­y or conduct only a cursory ‘desktop investigat­ion’.

Caroline Goodwin of the Criminal Bar Associatio­n said the figures would alarm law-abiding citizens.

She added: ‘How serious does having your house burgled, or being

mugged on a stolen bike have to be before it crosses the threshold for investigat­ion? It’s a lamentable state of affairs. Quite simply victims are being ignored despite the latest tirade of trigger-happy, rhetoric-fuelled politician­s who talk about unleashing a war of terror on crime.’

harry Fletcher, of the Victims’ Rights campaign, said victims would feel ignored while criminals were given the green light.

he added: ‘all research shows the best deterrent is the chance of getting caught yet conviction rates are falling every month for burglary and theft.’

The Mail used freedom of informatio­n laws to ask all 38 police forces in england how many crimes had been screened out within 24 hours over the past two years.

The Met, which serves more than eight million people in Greater london, admitted 304,265 cases had been dropped within a day in 2018 – 36 per cent of the total. The figure for 2017 was 34 per cent.

Surrey Police reported a figure of 17.5 per cent while West Yorkshire supplied figures suggesting the rate was 18 per cent. Northampto­nshire and cleveland Police both reported that 40 per cent of offences were dropped at some stage.

at the other end of the scale, both Devon and cornwall and avon and Somerset

‘Helps people feel safe’

claimed they screened out just 6 per cent of crimes in 24 hours last year.

Bedfordshi­re confirmed only that some crimes were screened out after a desktop investigat­ion and Staffordsh­ire said some were resolved ‘over the telephone’.

Boris Johnson has promised to prioritise policing and announced in July he would put an extra 20,000 officers on the streets.

home Secretary Priti Patel told the Daily Mail in an interview last month that she wanted criminals to ‘literally feel terror at the thought of committing offences’. however, Met commission­er cressida Dick has admitted that crime detection rates are ‘woeful’.

her force provided a detailed breakdown for all types of crimes screened out within 24 hours following the Mail’s freedom of informatio­n request.

The highest rate was for bike thefts at 67 per cent followed by ‘theft from person’ – muggings that include mobile phones and wallets – at 64 per cent.

No murders or rapes were screened out within 24 hours, the force stressed, although 8 per cent of knife possession offences a National were Police dropped. chiefs council spokesman said: ‘With more crimes and fewer officers on patrol it is taking longer to respond to incidents and there is increasing evidence that these delays hinder evidence collection, making it less likely that crimes will be solved.

‘Police chiefs have expressed their concern about the impact on proactive policing that prevents crime, solves problems and helps people feel safe.’ a Met spokesman insisted screening was the right policy. he added: ‘We need our officers to be focused on serious crime and cases where there is a realistic chance that we will be able to solve it. ‘ We also want them to be available to respond to emergencie­s and go to those members of the public that need our help the most.’ a spokesman for Greater Manchester Police said some of the crimes classified as being screened out were actually solved very quickly.

he added: ‘We are one of the busiest forces in the country and, with thousands fewer officers across Greater Manchester combined with increased complexity of demand, we have had to make changes to the way we work to meet the public’s need.’ cheshire, hertfordsh­ire, lincolnshi­re and Merseyside police forces claimed it would be too expensive to provide the figures. Dorset, Gloucester­shire and lancashire said it would be too labour-intensive.

cambridges­hire, Durham, essex, North Yorkshire, Northumbri­a, Nottingham­shire and West Midlands said they did not use a specific screening system although cambridges­hire admitted it closed some crimes after a ‘desktop investigat­ion’. Other forces did not respond.

Dame Vera Baird, Victims’ commission­er for england and Wales, said: ‘When the public read these figures, they will be alarmed. how can they feel confident they will be protected from criminals? Some will see little point reporting crimes as nothing will happen.

‘You can well imagine a family which has saved up and bought a bike for a parent to use to get to work or for a child’s special birthday who won’t be able to replace it and will have no chance of a prosecutio­n and so no hope of compensati­on.’

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