Title: Lessons learned from the Street Crime Initiative
1Lessons learned from the Street Crime Initiative
- Jonathan Smith, Research Development
Statistics, Home Office - Stephen Finer, Street Crime Action Team, Home
Office
2Nature of the problem in March 2002
- Sustained and accelerating increases in robbery
in England and Wales - Police activities having no impact on robbery
offence levels - Geographically concentrated in a small number of
BCUs and local hot-spots, but generating a
disproportionate fear factor - Increasing involvement of young persons as victim
and offender - Growth in mobile phone ownership providing more
easy targets - Drug use and drug markets believed to be crime
generators in many affected areas - Criminal justice system ineffective in dealing
with street crime offenders
3Reversing the upward trend
4The steep rise in robbery has been reversed
Annual Recorded Robberies in 10 Street Crime
Initiative Police Force Areas
110,000
100,000
29
90,000
Steep Rise
80,000
Number of Robberies
70,000
60,000
50,000
40,000
1998/99
1999/00
2000/01
2001/02
2002/03
2003/04
2004/05
5The steep rise in robbery has been reversed
Annual Recorded Robberies in 10 Street Crime
Initiative Police Force Areas
110,000
100,000
Rise Reversed
29
- 17
90,000
Steep Rise
80,000
Number of Robberies
70,000
60,000
50,000
40,000
1998/99
1999/00
2000/01
2001/02
2002/03
2003/04
2004/05
6Rate of reduction needs to be sustained
Annual Recorded Robberies in 10 Street Crime
Initiative Police Force Areas
110,000
100,000
Rise Reversed
29
- 17
90,000
Steep Rise
80,000
New Trajectory
Number of Robberies
70,000
60,000
Initial PSA Trajectory
50,000
40,000
1998/99
1999/00
2000/01
2001/02
2002/03
2003/04
2004/05
7Geographic concentration and fear factor
8Street crime accounts for a small proportion of
overall crime experienced
Source British Crime Survey, Home Office
9Within police forces, robbery is concentrated in
a small number of police basic command units
10Rising levels of robbery heightened public
concern and fear of crime
Source Sky News
Source Sky News
11Relatively low volumes of offending create
resource priority issues for police and other
agencies
Distribution of BCUs by daily offence rate
Source Street Crime Action Team data
12Explosion in youth street crime
13Children excluded from school at greater risk of
involvement in street-level offending
Source Mori Youth Survey 2001
14The summer plus evaluation
- The biggest ever programme of organised
diversionary activities - Around 91,000 young people participated in total
- Of these around 9,500 young people deemed to be
most at risk of falling into criminality were
targeted for key worker support (to keep them on
programmes and help them re-engage in education
at the end of the holiday period) - Exit survey showed 71 of this at risk group were
planning to return to education and further 6
into training or employment - Local crime fell by 5 across the areas covered
by the scheme over the summer months (July to
September)
Source DFES Research Report 392
15The mobile phone phenomenon
16(No Transcript)
17Link between problematic drug use and street crime
18Effectiveness of the criminal justice system
19Lessons learned - closing the gaps in our
understanding nationally and locally
20Lessons learned (1)
- It is possible to reverse a sharply rising crime
trend - Partnership is critical to success at both
national and local level - Well-targeted diversionary programmes can make an
impact on behaviour of young people - The robbery hotspots remain the robbery hotspots
although some of these have dispersed - there has
been little or no displacement
21Lessons learned (2)
- Access to reliable local data, and matching the
right responses to the problem, is critical to
success - Intervention with drug users can have a
preventive impact on crime if the analysis of the
problem is right - Improvements in the efficiency of the criminal
justice system are possible local co-operation
and understanding of competing pressures is
essential - prevention is better than rehabilitation, but
both are necessary for sustained crime reduction
and have a long lead in time
22Conclusions
- Todays programme builds on these key themes
- Offender profiling and targeting
- Partnership
- Resettlement and rehabilitation of offenders
- Young people and street crime
- Use of analysis, data and its exchange