The Sunday Telegraph

Flying squads put bobbies on the beat in crime hotspots

Pioneering approach by Suffolk police parachutes in teams to areas of need with impressive results

- By Charles Hymas HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

FLYING squads of beat bobbies have been set up to reduce neighbourh­ood crime and stamp out anti-social behaviour.

The teams, comprising a sergeant and six constables, are deployed to communitie­s plagued by drug dealers, car crime, shopliftin­g and other anti-social behaviour. Unlike convention­al bobbies on the beat, they are not attached to a specific neighbourh­ood but parachuted into communitie­s with surges in crime.

The innovative approach, pioneered by Suffolk police and backed by Kit Malthouse, the Policing Minister, aims to meet public demands for more “visible policing” by bobbies on the beat. But it is a targeted, cost-effective approach that directs neighbourh­ood policing at hotspots rather than simply having officers pounding a beat that may not have problems with anti-social behaviour.

Detective superinten­dent David Giles of Suffolk police said: “People say they want bobbies back on the beat. There used to be bobbies living in police houses in villages. We won’t go back to that.

“But we have to listen to the communitie­s when they say they want to see visible policing. We want to be engaged in the community. The teams’ ethos is that they don’t get allocated ‘response’ tasks.

“They have the freedom to move to different places to tackle community problems, engage with communitie­s and have adaptable, dynamic movement. They might be in one town one day, and another the next.”

As well as being parachuted into communitie­s, they can be dispatched to track down a wanted suspect by “knocking doors until they find them”, help arrest county lines drug dealers or police events such as the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee celebratio­ns.

The three squads, known as the Kestrel teams, cover the coastal east, urban south and rural west of Suffolk and have been funded by a precept on the county’s council tax. Their rotas have been designed to ensure at least one team can be deployed seven days a week.

They have also been specially trained in “forced entry” and “behavioura­l analysis”, known as Servator tactics, so they can be deployed into areas to spot suspicious behaviour by an individual, engage with them to establish why they may have acted furtively and, if necessary, arrest them.

In the year to September last year, they completed 1,103 hours of hotspot patrols, conducted 92 positive stop searches, submitted 2,221 intelligen­ce reports, collected £33,000 worth of drugs, arrested 66 suspects, seized 38 vehicles for traffic offences

‘They have the freedom to move to different places and might be in one town one day, and another the next’

and located nine missing people.

Mr Malthouse said: “One of the key components of success in crime fighting is focus. Sometimes that focus is on specific crime types, sometimes on specific criminals and often specific geography. When you combine all three… you often get outstandin­g results.”

It is part of a move to specialist squads – backed by Andy Cooke, HM chief inspector of police – that have seen forces introduce burglary and shopliftin­g teams.

Tim Passmore, Suffolk’s police and crime commission­er, who initiated the scheme with chief constable Steve Jupp, said the squads complement­ed “Sentinel” teams, which focus on organised crime. “It improves visibility and the public perception of the police because it gets officers out there quickly to tackle and prevent crime. I hope it will improve public confidence,” he said.

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