Police deny losing control after London killing
SCOTLAND Yard has denied it has lost control of London’s streets as the force said two men have been arrested on suspicion of murdering the capital’s latest victim.
The two suspects, in their 40s, were arrested from separate addresses on suspicion of the murder of Ian Tomlin, 46, who was killed in Battersea, south-west London on Wednesday.
Police were called to a group fighting in a communal area at about 5.30pm.
Medics battled to save the father’s life at the scene in Charlotte Despard Avenue, but he was pronounced dead 45 minutes later.
The victim frequently confronted drug dealers on the estate, his father has said.
After Scotland Yard launched a murder investigation, official figures showed a 14% increase in policerecorded homicide offences, from 630 to 719 in a year.
Superintendent Peter Gardner, head of the CID at Wandsworth Police, denied that the Metropolitan Police had lost control of the streets.
He said: “I certainly don’t feel it’s like that, but I understand residents’ frustration... I don’t feel at all that we’ve lost control of the streets, I think that’s not at all accurate.”
An operation in the area last year saw 54 arrests of people for drugs and other related offences, including possession of an offensive weapon.
Mr Gardner said the arrests followed information passed to the police by the public. He did not say whether the men were residents of the estate or if they knew the victim.