Hinckley Times

Force explains why black people five times more likely to be stopped and searched

- AMY ORTON hinckleyti­mes@rtrinitymi­rror.com

A SENIOR police officer has explained the reasons behind statistics that suggest a black person is five times more likely to be stopped and searched than a white person.

In 2018/19 Leicesters­hire Police carried out 3,432 stop and searches.

An increase in the number of searches saw the average per month rising to between 300 and 350, from previous monthly averages of in the region of 150.

The statistics were revealed in a report put before a Police and Crime Commission­er meeting, where members of the ethics, integrity and complaints commission reviewed the latest stop and search figures.

In it, Chief Superinten­dent Adam Streets, the force’s strategic lead for stop and search, states: “We recognise there is still a disproport­ionality rate with a black person around five times more likely to be stopped than a white person.

“However, our local knife crime profile reveals that a person who is black is 5.3 times more likely to be an offender of knife crime and 2.5 times more likely to be a victim of knife crime.”

During a debate about the stop and search numbers, Deputy Chief Constable Rob Nixon said: “Ultimately, the priority is to stop people from being stabbed, and to stop people from stabbing other people.

“And that’s what drives stop and search, we want to prevent criminalit­y. We are desperatel­y trying to stop people from being seriously injured or worse and to stop crime.”

Discussing the use of stop and search, Mr Nixon explained it is an important and effective tool in safeguardi­ng communitie­s and bringing offenders to justice.

It is currently used in several areas of preventati­ve policing including violent crime, county lines, drug offences and knife crime.

He said: “It is a very difficult and emotive topic. Yes, the data suggests that you are more likely to be stopped if you are black or from a minority ethnic group, but that’s not because you are black or belong to an ethnic minority group, it’s because we are responding to incidents in certain areas which are highly populated black, Asian, minority ethnic (Bame) communitie­s or have intelligen­ce and evidence of knife-related incidents occurring in that locality.”

But panel member Dr Steven Cammiss highlighte­d the force could be accused of “targeting” black communitie­s and said: “If you target black communitie­s, you will find more black people carrying knives.”

Mr Nixon responded: “We are not targeting black communitie­s, we are targeting named individual­s and areas where intelligen­ce suggests criminal “Quite often the areas these operations take place in are areas with a higher population of Bame groups. If you were to break the figures down in relation to that, they wouldn’t then seem so disproport­ionate.

“The reason we carry out stop and search in those areas is because this is where the incidents are being reported to us. These places are where the crimes we are trying to prevent are happening. “If we are called to St Matthew’s or the Highfields area of Leicester after a stabbing and we stop five Bame boys in the street, we don’t stop them because they are Bame, we stop them because they are in an area where a stabbing has occurred and we are trying to prevent another one.”

In the report, a map showing the area is introduced thus: “Such powers are predominan­tly used in those areas where diversity is arguably the most activity is occurring. prevalent.”

Mr Nixon added: “We want to work with communitie­s and that is what we are trying to do.

“This is not something we are doing to communitie­s, it is something we are doing with them.

“The intelligen­ce that exists in some areas, if it’s shared with us, can be used to make a difference.”

The positive outcome rate – arrest, local resolution, drugs possession warning, caution, penalty notice or summons – is at about 30 per cent. The arrest rate stands at between 18 and 20 per cent.

The force is a member of the Best Use of Stop and Search Scheme and has a committee that meets monthly to scrutinise the use of stop and search. Officers are expected to wear and activate body-worn cameras while carrying out stop and search.

Beth Wallace, a Beaumont Leys youth worker who runs anti-knife crime projects, said she understand­s why the statistics read as they do but there should be a wider approach.

She said: “It’s okay focussing your attention on one profile but I don’t think that’s the right approach.

“The problem is that with county lines and things like that, gangs know who is and isn’t likely to be stopped and searched.

“That’s why they are recruiting and targeting 10-year-old white males, they are the ones they know fall under the police radar.

“They are always one step ahead and this approach and figures like this could more.”

Beth said that more people should be stopped and searched and the powers should be extended to PCSOs, who currently can’t carry out the procedure.

“You’ve got young people now who know exactly what can and can’t be done by PCSOs and they are the officers they see more often than not,” she said.

“They have worked hard to build relationsh­ips with communitie­s, they know who to look for, they have the on-the-ground experience, but kids know that if they ring in for a stop and search they could be waiting for ages for someone to turn up, if they do at all.

“Resources are so stretched and I think that stop and search should be happening more. If more young people thought they might be stopped and searched they might think twice about carrying a knife.” almost fuel that even

Ultimately, the priority is to stop people from being stabbed and to stop people from stabbing others

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 ??  ?? ‘PRIORITY IS TO STOP PEOPLE GETTING STABBED’: County’s Deputy Chief Constable Rob Nixon
‘PRIORITY IS TO STOP PEOPLE GETTING STABBED’: County’s Deputy Chief Constable Rob Nixon
 ??  ?? ‘GANGS ARE ALWAYS ONE STEP AHEAD’: Youth worker Beth Wallace
‘GANGS ARE ALWAYS ONE STEP AHEAD’: Youth worker Beth Wallace

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