The Sunday Telegraph

Police ask dog walkers to prick up their ears to crime

- By Annabel Smith

‘DOGWATCH’ schemes are replacing traditiona­l neighbourh­ood watches, with police increasing­ly calling on early risers to help solve burglary and theft cases.

Dog walkers in Hampshire, Essex and Bedfordshi­re are being urged to report any suspicious behaviour they see while out with their pets.

Forces say they are more likely to witness potentiall­y criminal activity due to the unusual times they go out and the fact that they take similar routes every day, so will be able to recognise unfamiliar faces or behaviour.

Hampshire Constabula­ry became the latest force to launch a dedicated scheme in the New Forest earlier this month. Walkers were asked to report suspicious activity or vehicles, graffiti and vandalism, fly-tipping, hare coursing and livestock worrying to the police or appropriat­e partner agency.

The move will be seen as an attempt to crack down on perpetrato­rs escaping justice. Theft and burglary are of particular concern, with recent figures showing that just one in 500 cases are being solved in areas of Britain.

It comes as membership of neighbourh­ood watch schemes plummets. In 2015, the Neighbourh­ood Watch movement reported a 37 per cent decline in membership in the previous 12 years.

The Telegraph recently revealed how police chiefs were effectivel­y “screening out” low level crimes such as shopliftin­g, pickpocket­ing and theft if there were no witnesses.

Inspector Korine Bishop, from Hampshire Constabula­ry’s Country Watch team, said: “The scheme is not asking for members to intervene, but just to report anything that does not look right to the relevant authority.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom