The Scotsman

Police plan to stop investigat­ing every crime

- Dale Miller www.scotsman.com

Plans by Police Scotland to no longer investigat­e every crime reported to them from April have been described as a “source of shame” for Scottish ministers.

The wider rollout appears set to be given the green light after a pilot run in the north east, in which some minor crimes were not investigat­ed, was rated a success by the force.

Under the proposed move, thousands of ‘minor’ offences, such as vandalism or anti-social behaviour, could be written off. Police chiefs view the move, which could mean as many as one in 20 crimes not being taken forward, as allowing rankand-file officers to concentrat­e on more serious crimes.

The approach is poised to start nationwide from April. Police Scotland deputy chief constable Malcolm Graham said results from the pilot in the Aberdeen and Aberdeensh­ire areas had been “positive”, claiming the force had been “able to better manage victim and public expectatio­n”.

Scottish Conservati­ve shadow justice secretary, Russell Findlay said “the only winners are the criminals” from the proposed rollout.

He said: “Savage and sustained SNP cuts and their weak justice agenda have left police numbers at their lowest since 2008, with officers now unable to investigat­e certain crimes. It should be a source of shame for ministers that this dangerous pilot scheme looks set to be rolled out across Scotland.”

Chief constable Jo Farrell told a public board meeting of the Scottish Police Authority (SPA) in Glasgow: “What this seeks to do is look at alternativ­e approaches to the way in which we investigat­e and manage crime, much with a focus in relation to the experience of the victim, a wider focus around efficiency, and the victim experience. What it is not is a policy of non-investigat­ion. So I just wanted to be clear that we are committed to investigat­ing crimes, but we want the reporting of those crimes to be easy to do and for those investigat­ions to be proportion ate and appropriat­e.”

But David Thread gold, chairman of the Scottish Police Federation,which represents rank and-file officers, said :“This strategy is being driven purely by finance and not by basic policing principles – and that’s a problem.”

It was revealed on Thursday that Police Scotland’s projected over spend for the financial year had shrunk from almost £19 million to around £5m. Police Scotland’ s chief financial officer James Gray told the same SPA meeting the force had spent 88 percent of its annual budget for the financial year by the end of December, and was “tracking now to deliver a balanced budget for capital”.

A Police Scotland spokespers­on said of the proposed pilot expansion :“the proportion ate Response to Crime pilot concluded on November 20, 2023, we have undertaken a full evaluation and we are now engaging with partner organisati­ons before considerin­g next steps.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “It is vital Police Scotland continues to inspire public trust and maintains relationsh­ips with communitie­s. This will be crucial when the results of this pilot are examined to ensure local priorities continue to be met with no detriment to communitie­s.”

It should be a source of shame for ministers

Russell Findlay

 ?? PICTURE: ANDREW MILLIGAN/PA ?? Police Scotland would not investigat­e some low level crimes under the proposed plan, which could see ‘minor’ offences such as vandalism or anti-social behaviour written off
PICTURE: ANDREW MILLIGAN/PA Police Scotland would not investigat­e some low level crimes under the proposed plan, which could see ‘minor’ offences such as vandalism or anti-social behaviour written off

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