Daily Mail

First police online hate crime unit charges only 1% of web trolls

- By George Odling Crime Reporter

BRITAIN’S first police unit for tackling online hate crime has brought charges against less than one per cent of internet trolls it has probed.

Scotland Yard’s ‘online hate crime hub’ has logged 1,851 incidents since its launch in April 2017 – but just 17 cases, or 0.92 per cent, resulted in charges.

Only seven have led to prosecutio­ns, Freedom of Informatio­n figures show, with three more cases pending a charging decision from the Crown Prosecutio­n Service.

Those prosecuted include trolls found guilty of racist, anti-Semitic and homophobic abuse online.

The £1.7m scheme, launched by Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, has yielded just 59 other positive results, including youth referrals, harassment warnings and apologies.

Conservati­ve London Assembly member Susan Hall, who sits on the crime and policing committee, criticised the hub as ‘an exercise in spin over substance’.

She said: ‘With Sadiq Khan’s online hub delivering disappoint­ing

Set up scheme: Sadiq Khan results and hate crime on the rise, it is clear the mayor is failing to drive this disgusting discrimina­tion and abuse out of our city.

‘The money splurged could have been used to invest in additional police officers and protect Londoners from a whole host of crimes, including hate crime offences.’

The Met said the £326,344 needed for the pilot year of the hub was funded by the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC). Following the trial, a unit of five officers led by a detective inspector was given a £323,829 budget for 2018/19 and £363,000 in 2019/20 by the police force. A spokesman for Mr Khan said: ‘The mayor takes a zero-tolerance approach to hate crime in London and the hub is supporting victims and helping us respond to the growing threat that London’s diverse and minority communitie­s are facing both on and offline.

‘The Met has made huge progress in tackling all forms of hate crime, but it’s clear more needs to be done.

‘The police have City Hall’s full support in enforcing the law against anybody who commits these crimes.’

Scotland Yard said the unit now deals with both online and offline cases, reviewing every hate crime reported to the Met on a daily basis.

Some 1,851 online hate crime cases were logged up to August 2019, with 741 marked as still live or ongoing.

The low number of charges is thought to be due to the high CPS charging threshold for online hate, and the difficulti­es investigat­ors face in obtaining informatio­n from social media companies.

A Met spokesman said: ‘Officers working in the hub focused on reports that could be capable of proof, and passed those that fell below this threshold to colleagues from the charity Stop Hate UK for enhanced victim support, including liaison with social media providers to have offensive material removed.

‘The hub’s role was not to investigat­e or bring prosecutio­ns itself.’

Hate crime offences recorded in England and Wales hit a record high last year, with 103,379 in 2018/19 – up 10 per cent from the previous year and more than double the 2012/13 figure of 42,255.

But the Home Office statistics do not distinguis­h between crimes committed online and offline.

The CPS also said it does not hold data which identifies the number of hate crime prosecutio­ns where offending occurred online.

Hate crimes are defined as those motivated by hostility or prejudice of a characteri­stic.

Five strands are monitored nationally: Race or ethnicity; religion or beliefs; sexual orientatio­n; disability; and transgende­r identity.

But some police forces log other types of hostility under hate crime, including misogyny and incidents where victims were targeted because of their link to an ‘alternativ­e sub-culture’, such as goths.

‘Have offensive material removed’

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