The Mail on Sunday

Backlash fears as Priti boosts stop and search in knifings crackdown

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

HOME Secretary Priti Patel is preparing to risk uproar by giving police new stop and search powers – despite claims by campaigner­s that they target the black community unfairly.

New legislatio­n intended to tackle spiralling knife crime will give police the automatic right to search individual­s who have previously been convicted of knife offences without, as at present, having ‘ reasonable grounds’ to suspect they are carrying a weapon.

Ms Patel, whose move comes seven years after Theresa May introduced changes to the powers when she was at the Home Office to make it less ‘biased’, told The Mail on Sunday that she was acting because mothers of stabbed children insist ‘stop and search is a vital tool to tackle knife crime’.

The Police, Crime, Sentencing And Courts Bill, which will go before MPs within weeks, includes Serious Violence Reduction Orders giving police the ‘automatic right to search those who pose the greatest risk’, allowing ‘known criminals to be stopped at any time’.

In 2014, Mrs May said stop and search was ‘unfair, especially to young black men’. Studies have shown that black Britons are up to nine times more likely to be stopped than white people.

Ms Patel said: ‘The police tell me stop and search is a vital tool to tackle knife crime. Mothers of children who have been stabbed on our streets tell me that stop and search is a vital tool to tackle knife crime.

‘I have spent time with the mums, dads, brothers, sisters, aunts and uncles of young boys who have died on our streets. They all say to me, “Priti, why wasn’t my son searched? Why wasn’t his attacker searched? If they had been, my son could have been alive today.” That hammers home the reality of this devastatin­g situation.’

Currently, police may not use someone’s physical appearance, past conviction­s or a ‘ protected characteri­stic’ such as age, disability or sexual orientatio­n when making stop and search decisions.

Ms Patel added: ‘A minority will say these measures are disproport­ionate and will affect minority communitie­s or claim that this is racism. That is simply not true.

‘People will say these measures are controvers­ial. But to me, when people are dying, that doesn’t matter. The Government’s number one job is to keep our people safe.’

She said that in the past year, stop and search powers had led to almost 65,000 criminal acts being discovered and 34,000 arrests, including 4,418 for possessing weapons.

The Bill will also contain a Serious Violence Duty requiring ‘arms of the state’ to work together to analyse violent crime issues in their area and create a response strategy.

Last night, the Home Secretary thanked engineers ‘working throughout the weekend’ to restore data lost from the Police National Database, which is thought to have affected more than 400,000 crime records.

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