The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Met has worst record on tackling shopliftin­g

- By Charles Hymas The Telegraph

London police force has highest number of thefts in its area but records lowest rate of solving retail crime

THE Metropolit­an Police has the lowest rate for solving shopliftin­g offences while recording the highest numbers of shop thefts, analysis of official data by

shows.

The Met Police, which accounts for nearly one in seven of all shopliftin­g offences in the UK, solved five times fewer shop thefts than the best-performing force Norfolk, according to the Home Office figures for 2023.

Just 7.6 per cent of the 57,000 shopliftin­g offences – or one in every 13 of the crimes – reported to the Met last year resulted in a charge or an out-ofcourt resolution.

That compares with Norfolk police force which solved more than a third (35.2 per cent) of the 4,800 shopliftin­g offences reported to it in the year ending December 2023.

The analysis comes just a day after official figures showed shopliftin­g had hit a record high with nearly 1,200 offences every hour. The total of 430,104 shop thefts last year was up by more than a third (37 per cent) in a year.

Police chiefs have pledged to investigat­e every theft where there is a reasonable line of inquiry but they say it is not realistic for officers to respond to every shopliftin­g incident or report.

They have guaranteed attendance at shopliftin­g incidents if there is violence against a store worker, a suspected thief has been detained or officers are needed to secure evidence.

While nationally, just over one in five (20.9 per cent) of shopliftin­g offences result in a charge or action such as a community resolution or sentence, there are wide variations.

Sussex had a 10 per cent detection rate, West Midlands (10.3 per cent), Surrey (11.1 per cent), Bedfordshi­re (12.3 per cent), Avon and Somerset and Northumbri­a (13.3 per cent).

This contrasted with Norfolk’s 35.2 per cent, followed by Cumbria 33.8 per cent, Suffolk 31.4 per cent, South York- shire 30.1 per cent and Humberside 28.1 per cent.

David McKelvey, a former Scotland Yard detective chief inspector, who now runs a private “policing” service, said part of the fault lay with retailers who refused to prosecute and operated non-interventi­on policies when they were confronted with shoplifter­s.

“It is all about risk,” he said. “Do they want to risk one of their staff having to go to court and spend up to three days there.

“If you want to make an impact on shopliftin­g, you need to prosecute, with witness statements and CCTV. Sometimes they don’t hand over CCTV because of data protection concerns.”

His company, TM Eye, operates patrols of its private “bobbies” in uniforms across 16 business beats to tackle shopliftin­g and 16 residentia­l beats to combat anti-social behaviour and burglaries.

He claimed to have substantia­lly reduced shopliftin­g in the commercial areas by bringing private prosecutio­ns against offenders. Once caught, they are issued with trespass orders barring them from shopping areas.

If they breach them, they are then prosecuted for burglary by dint of having “trespassed” into a prohibited area, which enables courts to impose tougher sentences including jail.

The Home Office is proposing a similar crackdown with tagging to monitor prolific offenders and community behaviour orders barring them from shopping areas. Breaches will carry a maximum of five years in jail.

Sussex Police chief superinten­dent Rachel Carr said there had been 65 per cent increase in shopliftin­g reports largely due to encouragem­ent to businesses to contact police and the solving rate was now up to 18.7 per cent.

Chief Inspector Andrew Hill, Sussex police’s lead for business crime, said it had doubled its charge rate from five per cent to 10,8 per cent after a “renewed focus” on shopliftin­g including uniformed and plain clothes patrols in theft hotspots.

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