Bath Chronicle

Police spend on informants ‘the right thing to do’

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Avon and Somerset Police pays out around £65,000 a year to “handfuls” of informants to help crack crimes. Chief Constable Andy Marsh said the sum was a “minuscule” part of the force’s £328.5 million budget and was the right thing to do.

A freedom of informatio­n request revealed that between 2014/15 and 2018/19 the force paid informants - technicall­y known as “covert human intelligen­ce sources” £322,999.52, around £65,000 a year.

Speaking on BBC Radio Bristol on September 17, Mr Marsh said: “It’s not for everyday policing. If 500 catalytic converters have been stolen over five months, I think it would be worth paying someone £500 to understand who was doing that, in a way that led us to gather evidence to lock them up.

“It’s a tactic we use incredibly sparingly to deal with serious and organised crime, not trivial stuff.”

Chief Constable Marsh said the amount informants get paid is a “relatively small amount of money” and “in terms of our overall budget it’s a minuscule spend”, adding: “It needs to be proportion­ate to the sort of people you’re dealing with.

“We’ve only got handfuls of people registered as informants.

“If we can have some informatio­n that would lead to the recovery of a viable firearm, that’s surely something worth doing.

“If we could have informatio­n that would stop child sexual exploitati­on, that’s surely worth doing, or solve a murder.”

He said it was the same as Crimestopp­ers offering £5,000 for informatio­n about a racially aggravated assault on an NHS worker and is the “right thing to do”.

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