The Scotsman

Questions over ‘risk to public confidence’ amid change in Police Scotland crime strategy

- Martyn Mclaughlin Investigat­ions Correspond­ent

former Police Scotland superinten­dent has questioned how the force will implement a contentiou­s new policy that means it will no longer investigat­e some minor offences, warning some incidents could be logged and closed by staff who have never investigat­ed a crime.

Martin gallagher, who served as an area commander in Paisley during his near three decade-long service with the force, said the disquiet caused by the new strategy raised questions over whether it was “worth the effort” and the risk it posed to public confidence in the police.

Earlier this week, Police Scotland defended the decision to expand the ‘proportion­ate response to crime’ strategy in the wake of a pilot scheme in the north east of Scotland. The force argued the move would allow officers to devote more time to keeping people safe and reducing offending.

Assistant Chief Constable Emma Bond, above, said the shift was “not a policy of non investigat­ion”, and pointed to an evaluation of the pilot, which found a majority of officers felt the change had brought about a positive difference to their workload, with some 2,657 officer hours freed up over the course of the 12 week-long trial.

Chief superinten­dent Rob Hay, president of the Associaa tion of Scottish Police Superinten­dents, has also backed the switch, and stressed the approach “isn’t about not investigat­ing any particular crime type”. He said: “What it allows for is, where no clear lines of enquiry exist and there are no wider concerns, reports to be concluded at the earliest point of contact. In turn, this frees up officer time for investigat­ions which do have lines of enquiry.

“This should lead to better quality, more timeous investigat­ions and a better service for the public and doesn’t require them to repeat their report on a number of occasions, to different people, only for it to be filed undetected weeks later.”

But Mr Gallagher, the founder and director of Kilmailing Consulting, said a key question facing the force was who would process crime reports. “Is there confirmati­on that this will be veteran police officers who have experience of visiting crime scenes and undertakin­g investigat­ions, or will these crimes be logged and closed by staff who have in fact never investigat­ed a crime?” he asked. “In terms of staff taking these reports, recruitmen­t and training are one thing. Actually knowing what to look for to form a line of inquiry and having a passion for follow up to feel someone's collar is something very different.”

Mr Gallagher also said there were concerns about the strategy’s impact on control rooms.

The force’s evaluation of the pilot scheme found that following the change, half of team leaders in C3 division said their workload increased. Mr Gallagher said: “Since 2018, nearly two million calls to the 101 service in Scotland have been unanswered. This is not evidence of a police function with capacity to take additional work. However, the proposal to have crime reports taken and closed by phone or via the internet, will add to the backoffice burden for the service at a time when there is a voluntary redundancy scheme underway for police staff.”

Will these crimes be closed by staff who have never investigat­ed a crime?

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? Police Scotland say the new approach will free up frontline police officers
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN Police Scotland say the new approach will free up frontline police officers
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