The Daily Telegraph

Not one theft solved in eight out of 10 areas

Officers have failed to solve a single theft in more than eight out of 10 areas in England and Wales

- By Charles Hymas, Ben Butcher and Phoebe Southworth

Police have failed to solve a single theft in more than eight out of 10 neighbourh­oods in England and Wales over the past three years, a Daily Telegraph investigat­ion has found. Of nearly 21,000 neighbourh­oods that suffered at least one theft, none had been solved in 84 per cent of them, with all the cases closed with no suspect identified or charged. Victims’ watchdogs said the “shocking” data showed theft from the person had been “effectivel­y decriminal­ised”.

POLICE have failed to solve a single theft in more than eight out of 10 neighbourh­oods in England and Wales over the past three years, a Daily Telegraph investigat­ion has found.

Of nearly 21,000 neighbourh­oods that suffered at least one theft in the past three years, none had been solved in 84 per cent of them, with all the cases closed with no suspect identified or charged.

Victims’ watchdogs said the “shocking” data showed that theft from the person had been “effectivel­y decriminal­ised” even though it could cause serious financial loss, distress and upset to victims.

Dame Vera Baird, the victims’ commission­er, said: “Theft should be the bread and butter of neighbourh­ood policing.

“Faced with such low rates of suspects being identified, punished or charged, many victims will wonder whether theft has effectivel­y been decriminal­ised and feel like victims are increasing­ly being left to fend for themselves while thieves offend with impunity.”

Sir Mike Penning, a former policing minister, said the figures reflect a vicious cycle where the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) failed to take theft seriously which meant police officers were loath to investigat­e cases.

He said: “Police know the CPS are not interested and even if they get them into court, they just get a slap on the wrist. We need to prioritise crimes against the person, prioritise the victim and establish a pathway. At the same time, when you get them in court, the punishment has to match the crime.”

The analysis, of more than 155,000 offences over three years, identified 20 neighbourh­oods – each on average with more than 1,500 residents – which had suffered more than 100 thefts but where none had been solved by police between June 2019 and May 2022.

A neighbourh­ood in central Watford, Hertfordsh­ire, was the worst affected with all 274 of its thefts over the past three years closed with no suspect identified or charged.

It was followed by neighbourh­oods in Brixton North (189 unsolved), London Bridge and Bermondsey West (163), Borough and Southwark (159), Bedwell in Hertfordsh­ire (139) and central Colchester (138).

Even when the analysis was widened to bigger districts of 7,000 to 10,000 residents, police were still failing to solve any thefts in more than two-thirds (69.2 per cent) of the areas.

Eight of the 10 worst districts were in London, including King’s Cross and Pentonvill­e, Elephant and Castle and Islington East. These are overseen by the Metropolit­an Police which was placed in special measures last month for “systemic” problems including a failure to properly investigat­e crime.

Last month, a female photograph­er shared a CCTV clip on Twitter of the moment when she had more than £10,000 worth of property stolen as a thief took her Christian Dior backpack in a busy London cafe. She said she had taken the footage to police but “they did nothing”.

“The police didn’t even bother to look at the CCTV footage I was trying to show them,” she claimed.

In Watford, thieves have taken to targeting a local church, with none of the thefts solved. Jordan Guthrie, 32, manager of Wellspring Church in Watford, said it had included wallets from offices, a shower head and air fresheners.

The proportion of thefts resulting in a charge has fallen from one in 40 five years ago to one in 100.

Jeffrey Demarco, of Victim Support, said: “Theft must be taken seriously by the police in order to improve these appallingl­y low success rates.”

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