The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Man gets ‘race hate’ record... for whistling Bob the Builder at a neighbour

- By Michael Powell and Matthew Davis

A MAN has been landed with a police record for ‘racial hatred’ for whistling the Bob The Builder theme tune at his neighbour.

Officers in Bedfordshi­re recorded the incident as a non-crime hate incident, which will remain on file for six years and could be disclosed to prospectiv­e employers.

Few other details about the ‘crime’ are known, but it is just one of the bizarre cases unearthed by an investigat­ion into the controvers­ial practice of recording ‘hate incidents’ even if no law has been broken.

Others include a swimming teacher in West Yorkshire given a police record after a child’s mother claimed her son had been allowed to bang his head against the side of the pool ‘due to his ethnicity’, and a gay man who alleged he had been ripped off by a drug dealer because of his sexuality.

In Norfolk, a Portuguese national said an unknown person had deliberate­ly left a burger bun on their driveway ‘due to their ethnicity’.

Under the Hate Crime Operationa­l Guidelines, adopted in 2014, forces are required to record any actions deemed to be motivated by an element of hate, even if there is no evidence to prove them.

In total, 10,840 non-crime hate incidents were logged last year, bringing the total in the past five years to 120,000 – but Freedom of Informatio­n requests sent to 43 police forces in England and Wales failed to identify a single crime that had been solved as a result.

Campaigner­s have called for the ‘Orwellian’ system to be scrapped, claiming a police record could jeopardise a person’s career even if they were not charged with a crime.

‘The police have completely lost the plot,’ said Harry Miller, a former police officer from pressure group Fair Cop.

‘How the hell can whistling Bob The Builder at someone land you with a criminal record?’

Rupert Matthews, the Police and Crime Commission­er for Leicester, Leicesters­hire and Rutland, said: ‘The police have got more than enough to do and if it is not a crime then we cannot be putting resources into it. The public is right to ask why are police investigat­ing things that are not crimes.’

The College of Policing said noncrime hate incidents show up only on an enhanced criminal records check if it is relevant to the particular job and is approved by a chief constable.

David Tucker, its faculty head, added: ‘Chief officers must also consider allowing someone the opportunit­y to reply before informatio­n is disclosed, and it should not be disclosed if it is trivial, simply demonstrat­es poor behaviour or relates merely to an individual’s lifestyle.’

‘Orwellian system means police have lost the plot’

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