logo
Lawless London: Knife crime offences in the capital nearly double in decade under Sadiq Khan - as report shows West End is becoming a hotspot of offending

Lawless London: Knife crime offences in the capital nearly double in decade under Sadiq Khan - as report shows West End is becoming a hotspot of offending

Daily Mail​3 days ago
Knife offences in London have increased by 86 per cent in a decade, a shocking report has found.
London's iconic West End has more knife crime than almost 15 per cent of the rest of the capital combined, according to research from the Policy Exchange.
Just five per cent of robberies and 0.6 per cent of 'theft from person' crimes in London were solved last year, the research – titled Your Money or Your Life: London's Knife Crime, Robbery and Street Theft Epidemic' – found.
The report's author, ex-Scotland Yard detective chief inspector David Spencer, said his former force must take an unequivocal 'crime fighting first' approach to save the city from a knife, robbery and theft epidemic.
Knife offences across the country have increased by 78 per cent since 2014, but Mr Spencer said these figures had been skewed by the scale of the issue in the capital, where there were 16,879 knife crimes last year alone - about a third of the total across England and Wales.
The report points out that this coincides broadly with the mayoralty of Sir Sadiq Khan, who was this week publicly criticised by US president Donald Trump, who claimed he had done a 'terrible job.'
Sir Sadiq, who was knighted in June, has won the Mayoral elections three times since 2016.
The Policy Exchange report claims that since the pandemic knife crime has risen year on year throughout his tenure, with separate figures indicating a nine per cent rise in the past year.
A spokesman for the Mayor said murders, gun crime with lethal barrel discharges, knife crime with injury and burglary are all down since 2016 and last year teen murders were the lowest they had been for a decade.
But the report's author Mr Spencer said: 'A cosy consensus between police chiefs and political leaders has led to a collapse in proactive policing – in particular stop and search rates – allowing the streets to be surrendered to thugs, robbers and thieves.'
The Metropolitan Police said there had been a recent dip in knife crimes between April and May, while personal robbery was down 12.8 per cent in a year.
The report made 17 recommendations, including that the capital's top 20 knife crime hotspots should have enhanced 'zero tolerance' enforcement, with extra officers tasked with conducting high volumes of stop and search.
The number of searches has dropped by 56.4 per cent since 2022, from 311,352 annually to 135,739, the report states.
And the paper argues that contrary to criticism, the controversial practice is not deployed in a 'racist' way and reflected the proportion of the capital charged with serious crimes.
The report stated that 39.5 per cent of those stopped and searched were black, while 43.6 per cent of people charged with murder and 45.6 per cent of victims stabbed to death were.
'The police are merely responding to the demographic breakdown of serious and violent offending in the capital,' the report argued.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said he supported the 'zero tolerance' approach, which he understood would require a combination of clear policy, political will and savvy operational policing to implement.
'It also requires policing and political leaders to put public safety ahead of ideological dogma on issues such as stop and search,' he added.
The report also called on the Government to force Apple and Google to prevent stolen mobile phones being able to connect with cloud services, which would render them useless to thieves.
The Mail revealed on Saturday that traditional county lines gangs are turning to stealing phones over dealing drugs because unprecedented demand from overseas is creating a booming £70million black market.
The report also highlighted that 'hyper-prolific offenders' across Britain with 46 or more previous convictions are sent to prison on less than half of occasions after they are convicted again.
It recommended the Government should make immediate two-year custodial sentences mandatory for all such offenders upon conviction of a further offence.
Labour MP and former Metropolitan Police inspector Jonathan Hinder said the criminal justice system had been left broken, and there was an urgent need to properly resource courts and prisons to restore public faith.
'In the meantime, the law-abiding public want a strong police force to have the confidence to take on criminals, and it's time for politicians of all colours to give the police their full backing to do just that,' he added.
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: 'We are putting more officers in neighbourhoods than ever before, using our stop and search powers to taking thousands of weapons off the street – 17,500 over the past four years - and utilising new technology and data-driven tactics including focussing on the highest harm hotspots to bring offenders to justice and drive down violent crime.
'We are also arresting more than 1,000 more criminals each month thanks to the hard work of our officers.
'Our approach is having success - this financial year, knife-related crime is down by 16 per cent, there has 12.8 per cent reduction in robbery offences and homicide is at a five year low.
'This report repeats the calls that we have previously made for reform of the justice system and the collaboration of partners like major mobile phone producers.
'We all know that reducing knife crime requires a whole of society effort and we will support any initiative that seeks to make this happen.'
A spokesman for the Mayor of London said: 'The latest ONS stats also show that overall, the violent crime with injury rate is lower in London than in the rest of England and Wales. 'Record funding from the Mayor and an enhanced approach to neighbourhood policing in the West End has led to personal robberies falling by 20 per cent and violence with injury reducing by 25 per cent in the last year.
'The Mayor is determined to build on this progress – his record £1.16bn funding has secured 935 police officers and he has worked closely with the Commissioner to increase the number of police officers on the beat in the West End, plus additional police officers working in new or enhanced town centre teams in hotspot areas.
'Despite years of austerity by the previous government, this is the latest example of the Met Police and Mayor prioritising what Londoners want and delivering on their pledge to put high visibility policing at the heart of fighting crime and rebuilding community confidence and trust.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Deal or no deal? World leaders walk tightrope in tariff negotiations with Trump
Deal or no deal? World leaders walk tightrope in tariff negotiations with Trump

The Guardian

time43 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Deal or no deal? World leaders walk tightrope in tariff negotiations with Trump

It was grip-and-grin time for Ursula von der Leyen as she sat across from Donald Trump in Scotland last week, with the two announcing a deal for 15% tariffs on European imports that would avert a transatlantic trade war – but came at a stiff price for the 27-country bloc. After committing to a unilateral US raise on tariffs that came on the heels of a Nato commitment to increase defense spending to 5% of national GDPs, von der Leyen then thanked Trump 'for his personal commitment and his leadership to achieve this breakthrough'. 'He is a tough negotiator, but he is also a dealmaker,' she said, as the US president beamed. The EU was one of just a number of parties to strike a deal with Trump before his temporary pause on new tariffs came to an end this week. And like many others, the guiding principle for the EU appeared to be: it can always get worse. 'This is clearly the best deal we could get under very difficult circumstances,' Maroš Šefčovič, the EU trade chief, said. Others had a far bleaker interpretation of the dynamics, as Trump has wielded the threat of sky-high tariffs to cudgel his trading partners into submission. 'It is a dark day when an alliance of free peoples, brought together to affirm their common values and to defend their common interests, resigns itself to submission,' wrote the French prime minister, François Bayrou. Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán put it another way: 'It was Donald Trump eating Ursula von der Leyen for breakfast,' he said on his podcast. Later, he called her a 'featherweight'. World leaders have been forced to adopt a position of appeasement and pragmatism as they've approached the Trump administration, which has swung between imposing staggering tariffs on imports and then announcing last minute pauses and exclusions that suggest there is little rhyme or reason to the White House's tariff strategy. But the key factor for Trump appears to be taking whatever he can get. Countries across Asia exporting to the US were quickest to begin negotiating new trade deals with the White House. Vietnam was desperate to cut a 46% tariff imposed on the country, and Trump early last month announced that he had negotiated a 20% rate with Vietnamese negotiators. Except, it turned out, they believed that they had negotiated an 11% rate, Politico reported. And treasury secretary Scott Bessent this week admitted that he had never seen the deal, which the Vietnamese authorities have never confirmed. Trump reportedly used the trade threats along with other incentives in order to broker a recent peace between Thailand and Cambodia after fighting broke out along the border between the two countries. He soon announced a 19% rate – a significant cut from 49% for Cambodia and 36% for Thailand – which appeared more motivated by international politics than trade considerations. But while many countries in the region will breathe a sigh of relief as they avert sky-high tariffs, some see a new danger in the arbitrary redrawing of the US's trade relationship with the world. 'What we felt during this negotiation is that the US trade environment is fundamentally changing,' South Korean trade minister Yeo Han-koo said shortly after a deal was made to tariff imports at 15%, down from a threatened 25%. The two sides had made a verbally agreement but had not made a formal draft, he said, because the deal had to be struck so quickly. 'I think we are entering a new normal era,' he said. 'So, although we have overcome this crisis, we cannot be relieved, because we do not know when we will face pressure from tariffs or non-tariff measures again.' Leaders who have stood up to Trump are having the hardest time. Among others, Trump has focused his ire on Canada, which he has blamed for the fentanyl crisis in the US, a charge that Canada's prime minister Mark Carney has rejected. Trump on Friday announced that he would raise tariffs on Canada, a top trading partner, to 35%, as tough negotiations between the two sides continued. Carney, who had coined the elections slogan 'Elbows up, Canada' as a signal of defiance against Trump's tariff and annexation threats, said he was 'disappointed'. 'While we will continue to negotiate with the United States on our trading relationship, the Canadian government is laser focused on what we can control: building Canada strong,' Carney said.

Seth Meyers on the Epstein conspiracy: ‘This is a crisis of Trump's making'
Seth Meyers on the Epstein conspiracy: ‘This is a crisis of Trump's making'

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Seth Meyers on the Epstein conspiracy: ‘This is a crisis of Trump's making'

Late-night hosts discussed the ongoing Jeffrey Epstein scandal and the 'spite' behind Donald Trump's impending tariffs. On Late Night, Seth Meyers spoke about the theories circulating over the death of Epstein, spurred on by the alleged missing minute from his jail cell video on the night of his death. He said that Trump is not in the right place to be handling it, as he's 'old' and 'tired' and just came back from a golfing vacation in Scotland. While there, he opened a private new golf course, which was on the official White House live stream. 'They're not even pretending any more, there's no separation,' Meyers said. Trump is 'tired from all his golfing and self-enrichment' and was recently seen trying not to fall asleep during a press briefing with Mehmet Oz. 'Imagine if Joe Biden did this,' he said. Meyers added that 'he can't hear or understand reporters' questions any more' before playing footage of him getting confused over a recent question about Russia. Trump has been asked why he cut ties with Epstein and recently said he didn't want to waste people's time by going through the details. 'Please, my man, waste our time!' Meyers said. He then 'dug the hole even deeper' and 'made it so much worse' by rambling on about Epstein stealing workers from his spa, which he said was one of the best spas in the world. 'Stop talking about the spa – is it your safe word?' Meyers asked. But it's 'not just Trump who keeps digging a hole for himself', there's also Dan Bongino, an Epstein-obsessed podcaster who is now the deputy director of the FBI. Despite him claiming that the full, unedited tape would be released, experts have said that while it might be 'unclear how much time is missing', this isn't the full tape after all. 'This whole thing is a crisis of Trump's making,' he said. On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert reminded viewers that it was the last day of July, which means that the 'basket of deplorable tariffs are gonna kick in' the day after. Trump had originally claimed he had made 200 deals ready for 1 August but 'on the other hand, no he didn't', with just eight in place before the deadline. Colbert said that 'his demands are insane' and many of the countries are included 'just for spite'. This week also saw him revive the presidential fitness test for American schoolchildren so they could be 'as fit as President Trump'. It had originally been retired in 2012 for a switch to a focus on individual health rather than athletic feats. Trump signed the executive order flanked by athletes, including former NFL star Lawrence Taylor, who is a registered sex offender. Colbert called it 'a brilliant way to distance yourself from the whole Epstein scandal'. This week also saw lawyer Alan Dershowitz, known for clients such as OJ Simpson, Harvey Weinstein and Trump, make further complaints about how he is shunned while in Martha's Vineyard. He had previously complained that his politics had made him a social pariah, but now he is suing a vendor who refused to serve him pierogi. He was later seen speaking to a police officer about the incident. 'They have bigger crimes to investigate, like someone's houseguest bringing a domestic chardonnay,' Colbert quipped.

Free The Donald
Free The Donald

Telegraph

time4 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Free The Donald

The talk among Maga supporters at Turnberry Golf Club this week was whether Donald Trump should be offered the freedom of the City of London on his State visit next month. The Honorary Freedom has never been awarded to a sitting US president. One City figure tells me: 'This would be a unique honour, and it is tied to our history with a focus on trade.' But the Corporation of London sounds lukewarm. A spokesman says: 'By convention, only heads of state or government who have served a minimum of seven years in office are eligible to be considered for the Honorary Freedom.' Any decision must be approved by the Court of Common Council, he adds, and it will not meet until next month. Surely this is the time to waive conventions? False flag I was one of the lucky reporters in the room when Donald Trump met Sir Keir Starmer at Turnberry on Monday. It felt like our PM was visiting Trump in the US, even though we were in Scotland. And no wonder: the US flag was flown on the left of the Union flag, meaning that the Stars and Stripes was 'the senior national flag', according to guidance from the Flag Institute. Was this a diplomatic snub? Joanna's marriage secret Dame Joanna Lumley has been married to conductor Stephen Barlow for almost 40 years, which has ensured that barely any modern-day pop music is played behind closed doors. 'I'm married to a classical musician, so we don't really have popular music in the house very often,' the Ab Fab actress, 79, explains on Radio 2. 'I stopped at about The Everly Brothers, really.' Awks in Ambridge Snogging your girlfriend in Ambridge is 'horrendously awkward' says Taylor Uttley, who plays Brad Horrobin and is in an air relationship with Mia Grundy on Radio 4's The Archers. He says: 'You have to time a kiss on the back of your hand at the same time, relative to the same microphone. So you have to look between you and go OK 'one, two, three and then do that'. That's awful.' Awks! Tarrant's TV exit Former Tiswas and Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? presenter Chris Tarrant does not miss being on TV shows. He says: 'I spent 50 years on them. I'd rather be fishing or going somewhere nice with my old lady or my kids.' Tarrant says he is still asked to do 'dreadful things' including The Masked Singer. But he says. 'It's a naff idea. I can't believe they make it. And what's next? You know, The Masked Chef, The Masked Knife Juggler. What else are they going to do?' Tarrant adds: 'My missus says to me 'It would reignite your career' but the last thing I want to do is reignite my career. I'm trying to stop.' Shy Michael Former Conservative MP Sir Michael Fabricant has hit back against campaigners who want to cancel naked bike rides which happen in UK, Birmingham and Cardiff. 'These are just a bit of fun,' Fabricant, 75, told the BBC. 'These are fairly innocent events. If you don't want to see bits and pieces wobbling around, don't look.' The nearest Fabricant got to riding naked was when he was cycling alone for charity. He says: 'I had tiny little shorts on or I would have been arrested.' Why so modest Fabbers? Cleanshaven Philp Shadow home secretary Chris Philp shaved off his beard before the last general election, prompting speculation that it was a turn-off for voters. 'No, that is not true,' he told me on GB News' Chopper's Political Podcast. 'I did suffer a backlash on the beard, but it came amongst others from my 12-year-old daughter and unfortunately, faced by a backlash from my 12 year old daughter, the beard had to go.' Travelling light Peterborough readers have been sending in their packing tips for travelling light, following actor Nigel Havers' example. David Shaw tries to 'halve the amount of clothes and double the amount of money' he is taking just before he sets off, while Michael Weeden said: 'I can think of nothing more efficient, than going to a naturist resort and packing just a bottle of good sun cream.' John Turner was so inspired he wrote a long poem, ending: 'So, now I've made a rational decision/whenever I go wandering from home./ Be it Blackpool or Bahamas,/ I have had my share of dramas;/ It's pyjamas, a toothbrush and a comb.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store