The Sunday Post (Inverness)

FURY OVER ‘VANISHING’ KNIFE K CRIMES

Police accused of ‘hiding’ problem

- By Gordon Blackstock

POLICE were last night accused of hiding the true extent of knife crime.

The claim came after a memo – showing that some knife crimes were being omitted from official statistics – was leaked to The Sunday Post. The document – penned by a senior officer – urged police staff to change the way offences were recorded as the current set up “obscured” the real extent of knife crime.

A police source said the situation had meant some knife offences had “vanished” from figures while campaigner­s claimed records had been “manipulate­d”.

KNIFE offences vanished from official figures, a secret Police Scotland memo reveals.

Bosses have now ordered a U-turn in the way crime is recorded – to ensure the public is given a more accurate picture.

In a leaked memo, one of Scotland’s most senior police officers said recording of knife crime “obscured” the “real extent of knife/ weapon crime” in the country and ordered it be stopped.

It has led to accusation­s from campaigner­s and politician­s that crime figures were being manipulate­d.

Critics are calling for answers as to who ordered the recording system, which gives a false impression as to how safe our streets really are.

According to the Scottish Government, crime is at a 42-year-low. Justice Secretary Michael Matheson recently welcomed the progress Police Scotland has made, praising theirr “excellent” work to slash crime rates.

But today’s Sunday Post revelation­s scotch those plaudits.

Police Scotland’s figures show theree were 1720 instances of people caught carryingkn­ives,But the in offensivet­he force’s first statistica­lhalf weapons,of 2016-17. experts includingh­avee been omitting some knife crimes from figures presented to the Scottish Government in a policy known as subsuming crimes.

One police source said: “It means where there’s been a crime – for example, an assault where someone was carrying a knife – instead of the crime correctly being recorded as assault with possession of a knife, it would justt be recorded as an assault.

“The knife aspect of the crime effec tively ‘vanishes’, allowing the police toto present a sanitised version of events to politician­s and the public.

“But it’s not right. At best it’s manipulati­ve, at worst it could be seen as a cold lying to make it look like a better job is being done than is lreally the case.” Last night, campaigner John Muir branded the revelation a “disgrace” and proof that knife crime statistics had become a “political football”. This July will mark the 10th anniversar­y of his 34- year- old son Damian’s death in an unprovoked and frenzied attack in Greenock, Inverclyde. Maniac Barry Gavin – who was later jailed for a minimum of 15 yearyears for the attack – had been on bail after committing a string of oother savage assaults. John, who received an MBE in 2015 for his work to tackle knife crime, said: “It’s horrendous to see the figures being manipulate­d like this. “Each statistic and record relarelate­s to a real person and a family potentiall­y ruined by knives.

“We can’t fix the problem of knife crime unless we know the full extent of it. We need to know why this has been going on and for how long.”

Subsuming was designed to make reporting crime stats simple.

According to Police Scotland, it’s a term “used to record a number of criminal acts as one crime”.

In essence, it was meant to end a situation where various criminal acts committed by one offender could be mistaken for a mini- crimewave committed by various yobs.

An example would be if a criminal tries to steal your car and, on arrest, it is discovered he also has a knife.

While he might face knife and car offences in court, only the more serious charge would be recorded by police.

So the record of the knife crime would simply disappear.

It’s not known when the practice was first adopted but there are claims it has become more prevalent since the creation of Police Scotland.

Former Shadow Justice Secretary Graeme Pearson said he had spent years trying to get to the bottom of how

common subsuming crime was. It was difficult to tell who was the driving force behind the policy, he said, labelling the “complex” practice “unnecessar­y and unhealthy”.

Mr Pearson said: “Police Scotland like to present low crime figures to the Scottish Police Authority, who then like to present the low figures to the Scottish Government.

“It in turn likes having a ‘headline’ figure to report to the public, saying crime has never been lower.

“But it’s not what the communitie­s across Scotland say.”

As far back as 2012, the Scottish Police Federation was warning the government was “hiding” the true extent of Scotland’s crime rate.

But this is the first time authoritie­s have admitted it was having a detrimenta­l effect on the stats presented to the public.

The Sunday Post has tried to find out the extent of subsuming knife crime.

Our repeated requests, under Freedom of Informatio­n laws, were turned down.

Coincident­ally, as we were asking questions about the issue, police chiefs quietly changed the rules.

The Scottish Crime Recording Board ( SCRB), set up in 2015, met to discuss the discrepanc­ies at a private meeting in March.

Details of what was discussed at St Andrew’s House in Edinburgh aren’t available to the public yet. But, just weeks later, Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham ordered staff to alter the way knife crime was recorded.

An April 12 memo said Police Scotland wanted the change because of a “crimecount­ing anomaly which somewhat obscured an enhanced level of analysis as to the real extent of knife/ weapon crime.”

The memo states: “From 1 April 2017, where an offensive weapon or an article with a blade or point has been used in the commission of a crime, the pos

session of the knife/ weapon or bladed article will no longer be subsumed into the substantiv­e crime and should be the subject of an additional ‘possession’ crime.”

Callum Steele of the Scottish Police Federation said: “Police officers all over Scotland know instances of violence involving knives are a massive problem. It’s difficult to conclude anything other than the practice of subsuming many of these crimes distorted this reality for reasons that are impossible to fathom.”

A Police Scotland spokeswoma­n said compiling and publishing crime statistics was a matter for the SCRB.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “All recorded crimes and offences involving knives are counted and published by independen­t statistici­ans.

“The approach taken to recording these crimes has been in place for more than 20 years and is the same approach taken elsewhere in the UK.

“Knife crime has fallen significan­tly over the past decade, as indicated not only by recorded crime figures but by other sources including a 59% fall in emergency hospital admissions for assault with a knife since 2006-07.”

 ??  ?? Dumping the weapons ... but we don’t know the extent of the problem.
Dumping the weapons ... but we don’t know the extent of the problem.
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John and son Damian.
■ John and son Damian.

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