Nottingham Post

‘One knife offence in the city is one too many’

MAN ARRESTED DURING POLICE OPERATION AT STATION

- By JOEL MOORE joel.moore@reachplc.com @Joelmoore9­8

A NOTTINGHAM­SHIRE police sergeant has declared one knife offence in the city is one too many as police scanned people for weapons at Nottingham Station.

Officers used a metal detecting arch at the Station Street exit on Thursday afternoon (November 17).

One man was arrested during the operation which is part of the nationwide Operation Sceptre.

“We’ve already stopped a male that avoided going through the metal detector and he was found to have a knife on him, so he’s been arrested and is on his way to custody now,” sergeant Richard Tiernan told the Post at the scene.

“We’ve also stopped a male who was behaving suspicious­ly around the arch. When we’ve gone to search him he had £11,000 and some cannabis.

“We’re looking for any knives that fit the definition of a bladed article. The knife we recovered was a large lockable knife, around five to six inches long.”

Police asked some commuters to pass through the arch, but Sgt Tiernan said this was not the main focus for officers.

“We’re looking for people who are avoiding the arch or set it off,” he continued.

“If we think we’ve got the grounds to do a search for a knife then we will.

“A big part of an operation like this is looking for people who are avoiding the arch.

“They might see it and spin around quite obviously and we will be looking at picking them up.

“It’s focused on detecting people coming into the city centre with knives or weapons on them and trying to disrupt that activity.

“We see the station as a transit hub for people that come in on the tram from other parts of the county.

“One knife offence in the city centre is one too many. This isn’t something we do for a week and then forget about, it’s part of our daily business.

“We have officers going into colleges to have conversati­ons with kids and we have regular operations where plain clothes officers act as spotters to help identify people with knives.

“There’s always a huge amount of work going on around knife crime.”

Inspector Paul Gummer added: “There’s a deep rooted issue within society, this is only one element of the work we do to tackle it.

“There’s input we’re giving to schools and colleges, there’s the work we’re doing on the street all the time.

“There have been fairly high profile incidents where they are predominan­tly young people getting stabbed.

“Our researcher­s tell us the people who are carrying knives are much more likely to stab someone and be stabbed by somebody else. That’s the cycle we need to break.”

The week-long operation has also focused on educating people, especially the young, about the consequenc­es of knife-carrying, with officers visiting schools and colleges across the county to highlight the dangers.

Amnesty bins have also been set up inside police stations in a bid to encourage people to get rid of unwanted knives without the fear of being prosecuted.

 ?? JOSEPH RAYNOR ?? Sergeant Richard Tiernan, of
News Nottingham­shire Police, pictured alongside the metal detector arch at Nottingham Station
JOSEPH RAYNOR Sergeant Richard Tiernan, of News Nottingham­shire Police, pictured alongside the metal detector arch at Nottingham Station
 ?? ?? Rail passengers pass through the detector arch at the station
Rail passengers pass through the detector arch at the station

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