
Staggering number of times UK's worst teen tearaway was arrested by cops before his 18th birthday revealed
A Sun on Sunday probe found there are 25 child criminals who have been arrested 50 times or more.
Advertisement
2
Britain's worst child offenders
Essex was the worst for prolific youth offenders with the top three all from the county — each detained more than 100 times — and six in the top ten.
South Yorkshire overall had five children with 50 or more arrests, with the worst offender having their collar felt 94 times between the ages of 12 and 14.
The shocking figures also reveal kids are being nicked for serious crimes including making murder threats, arson, sex offences, drugs and burglaries.
One 17-year-old in Kent has 56 arrests including for stalking, sex offences, making death threats and having a knife.
Advertisement
READ MORE ON CRIME
And a youth in Suffolk was held 76 times between the ages of 12 and 17 for racially-motivated crimes, assaults and strangulation.
The Sun on Sunday made Freedom of Information requests to all 43 police forces in England and Wales.
Several said they were unable to reply due to data protection, while at least four — including London's Met — had no kids arrested more than 50 times.
Retired Sussex Police Det Chief Supt Kevin Moore said: 'Unfortunately, the figures do not surprise me at all. For far too long there has been a lack of an effective sanction for juvenile offenders.
Advertisement
Most read in The Sun
Exclusive
'Youths realise they can offend with impunity as there is little likelihood of a custodial sentence.
'We need to get a grip of this. Custody is a deterrent.'
Brutal stabbings of teenagers, machete brawls in the street, and drug gangs stalking kids on the school run - the crime and violence tearing Woolwich apart
2
A Sun on Sunday probe found there are 25 child criminals who have been arrested 50 times or more

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
3 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Premier League clubs should fork out for police at matches, top cop says – as he slams £70million costs
F OOTBALL clubs should foot the bill for the £70million cost of policing matches, Britain's top cop has demanded. Met chief Sir Mark Rowley slammed the system where taxpayers pick up the tab to keep Premier League games safe. 2 Sir Mark Rowley said it is not fair for taxpayers to pick up the bill Credit: Getty Images - Getty 2 Met chief Sir Mark Rowley Credit: Getty He called for a 'polluter pays approach' - warning local communities lose out on frontline policing while forces are stretched covering football . Sir Mark told the BBC: 'Policing of football matches across the country, mainly Premier League, cost policing £70 million it doesn't get back from football clubs. In London, it's more than a third of that. 'If you're running a profit making event that because of the nature of it, requires security, requires policing to support your security because of the criminality that is going to be experienced, why isn't the organiser paying for that, rather than local communities who lose their resources to go to football matches?' The Met boss also blasted Britain's outdated 43-force policing model - saying it's been 'not fit for purpose for at least two decades' and urgently needs ripping up. READ MORE ON POLITICS He warned that with disappointing funding from Chancellor Rachel Reeves, forces face brutal cuts - with 3,300 cops and staff already slashed. Sir Mark added: 'We've cut 1,600 over the last couple of years… 1,700 officers and staff this year, that 3,300 out of an organisation just over 40,000 is a big hit.' He's now pushing for radical reforms and bigger regional forces, saying: 'We need to reduce the number of forces by two-thirds… making better use of the limited funding available.' And he warned unless urgent action is taken, overstretched cops will be forced to stop investigating some crimes altogether. Most read in The Sun


The Irish Sun
4 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
I stared into eyes of 7/7 bomber & saw moment he blew himself up – all I remember is a white flash… it was hell on earth
A MAN who survived the 7/7 bombings has recalled the chilling moment he stared into the eyes of a terrorist just seconds before he blew himself up. Dan Biddle, now 46, lost a spleen along with both legs and his left eye after a suicide bomb exploded next to him on a Tube train near Edgware Road station on that fateful morning 20 years ago. Advertisement 6 Dan Biddle recalls the moment he locked eyes with the suicide bomber Mohammad Sidique Khan Credit: Olivia West 6 The scene of the devastation near Edgware Road Credit: Getty 6 The bombed Edgware Road Circle Line train where six victims died Credit: Gavin Rodgers 6 Dan Biddle pictured above with the hero that saved his life, army medic Adrian Heili Credit: Olivia West In the morning rush hour on July 7, 2005, four Dan, was in touching distance of lead bomber Mohammad Sidique Khan, on a rush-hour London Underground Circle line train. But despite surviving his near-fatal wounds against the odds, he can never forget the moment he locked eyes with the crazed bomber. At 8.52am Dan was leaning against the Perspex partition at the front of the second carriage on the Tube train travelling from Edgware Road towards Paddington. Advertisement Read More in UK News Suicide bomber Khan, 30, from Leeds, was on the seat the other side of the Perspex, just six inches away. In an exclusive chat with The Sun, Dan said: "As as we pulled out of Edgware Road station, I could feel somebody staring at me. "I was just about to turn around and say, 'What are you looking at?', and I see him put his hand in the bag. "He looked up at me, quickly lowered his eyes, put his right hand through the zip in the top of his bag and exploded himself. Advertisement Most read in The Sun Exclusive Exclusive 'When the bomb went off in a brilliant white flash an immense amount of heat hit me." Khan had detonated a homemade bomb - made using an al-Qaeda-devised chemical recipe - that he was carrying in his rucksack. The catastrophic explosion and sprayed coins into his face like bullets, blinding him in one eye. With the one eye he had left he looked around the wrecked train and he confessed that the carnage he witnessed still haunts him decades on. Advertisement Speaking to The Sun in a new documentary that said: "Straight after the explosion, you could have heard a pin drop. It was almost as if everybody had just taken a big breat. "And then it was like opening the gates of hell. Screaming like I've never heard before." I was a hero cop who busted 7/7 terrorists - how a chance meeting on holiday revealed my own BROTHER was a ferocious £3m drug lord The device killed David Foulkes, 22, Jennifer Nicholson, 24, Laura Webb, 29, Jonathan Downey, 34, Colin Morley and Michael Brewster, both 52. Dan continued: "It was as if someone had pumped the carriage up to the maximum it could take and then sucked it out really quickly. Advertisement 'The hand pole from the carriage speared my body before I bounced out of the train headfirst, hit the tunnel wall and landed in the crawlspace with a big chunk of metal on top of me. "My arms and hands were alight and my face was burnt as well." And now, as survivors prepare to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 bombings, construction worker Dan faces fresh agony. Because while the great and the good will join survivors and families of the 52 dead at St Paul's Cathedral on July 7, Dan will not be one of them. Advertisement Despite being the most injured survivor of the London bombings, both he and the hero who saved his life have not been invited. Dan only survived because brave former Army medic Adrian Heili ignored his own injuries to crawl under the mangled carriage to stop him bleeding to death. The former military medic had blood pouring down his face and a dislocated shoulder but instead of fleeing he stepped over several charred bodies and headed towards Dan's cries for help. The pair who are best of pals have supported each other through the horrors they have each endured in the last 20 years since fate brought them together amid the nightmare of Britain's first suicide bombing. Advertisement Dan added: 'I've died three times on an operating table and had the same number of goes at killing myself. Luckily, the doctors were brilliant at saving my life and I was crap at ending it. 'It's 20 years since the bombing and it's still as crystal clear in my head now as if it happened 30 seconds ago.' 6 First responder Paul Dadge helps an injured passenger at Edgware Road tube station Credit: AP 6 The London Underground train which was bombed at Aldgate tube station during co-ordinated attacks Advertisement


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
How lethal £1 ‘jungle pills' that cause monkey hallucinations have ravaged UK town where ‘zombies' pass out in bus lanes
WITHIN minutes of gulping down a mystery pill he'd bought for a quid after a heavy night of drinking, Bryan Heslop blacked out. The former lifeguard, 63, was later found by his nephew, unable to walk or talk, and when he regained consciousness he began hallucinating monkeys. Advertisement 11 Drug users in a 'zombie-like' stupor are seen on the streets of Gateshead Credit: NNP 11 Bryan Heslop had a terrifying experience after taking a £1 pill Credit: NNP 11 A woman in Gateshead curled over in a ball after taking drugs Credit: NNP Bryan was one of the lucky ones. He believes the cheap drug was part of a terrifying new wave of Just last month Northumbria Police issued a warning after a suspected dangerous batch of drugs was believed to be behind the deaths of five people within 24 hours. It followed the passing of a man in his 40s from Harlow Green - close to the famous Angel of the North - and four others, who suffered cardiac arrests. Five men and two women have been arrested and remain under investigation in relation to the supply of the substances. Advertisement READ MORE FEATURES Now worried locals tell The Sun their once-proud northern town is now 'riddled to bits" with drugs, which some fear are up to triple the normal strength and 'made in jungles', not labs. It's led to scenes of homeless addicts stumbling around in zombie-like stupors, putting people off visiting the high street. Bryan believes the mystery drugs are "blues", which is slang for the opiod painkiller oxycodone, or other unknown drugs, which can be lethal if overdosed. Recalling his 'moment of stupidity', he said: 'All I can remember was boom, lights out. Advertisement Most read in The Sun "My nephew came from Newcastle to look for me. He found me and picked me up but I couldn't even walk or talk. "I'm an old man, so I shouldn't have taken it, but when you're drunk, you will take anything. The northern town that's become flooded with deadly black market pills from China "I was hallucinating the next day. I woke up and I thought there was a monkey in my bed. "It is Russian roulette sometimes with what goes around. There have been loads of people dying around here because of dodgy drugs. Advertisement "Ten of my friends have, and another guy I was speaking to had another ten, so we're talking about 20 people - the youngest I lost was 23 years old. "These drugs come piling in from abroad. This place is riddled to bits with drugs. "I would never normally take something on the street that's handed and the penny should have dropped when the tablet only cost £1 - that is too cheap. "Then the dealer told me £2 instead and that's when I necked it. I can't remember anything after that. I didn't have a clue what was inside it." Advertisement 11 This woman, believed to be under the influence of drugs, was later spoken to by police Credit: NNP 11 Locals say their high street is crumbling Credit: NNP Brian added: "In Gateshead people will gather around the centre asking if I want to buy this or that. "Why are they pushing it when they know it could be killer batches? It happens every single day. This centre is the main pitch, near to the CCTV cameras." Advertisement Another man, who wished to remain anonymous, said the issue of "dodgy" drugs arises when dealers in other countries don't weigh them properly. He explained: "It's a problem in Gateshead, but it's not just here. It's Newcastle, it's Whitley Bay and places like that. They aren't made inside proper labs. They're made in jungles and they come across just like your dodgy cigarettes Gateshead local "In Gateshead I was there when my mate went over. He was a very good friend of mine and it was horrible. I have lost about four or five people since Christmas. "If you want to know why there are bad batches going around, it's because you don't know what's inside the drugs. Advertisement "They aren't made inside proper labs. They're made in jungles and they come across just like your dodgy cigarettes. "If you get a batch of tablets, the box might say it's 30 milligrams, but inside you could get one that's just 10mg, or one that has 100mg. They don't get weighed properly." £120million drugs bust 11 Drug baron Peter Lamb was jailed for 17 years Credit: NCA 11 He smuggled £120million worth of cocaine inside rolls of artificial grass Credit: NCA Advertisement 11 Mum Lisa Birnie gets 'anxious' walking around the town centre now due to the drug problem Credit: NNP For locals born and bred in the town, the issue is stark and rotting the community to its core. A dark underworld of drug dealers is plaguing Gateshead - including baron Peter Lamb, 66, jailed last week for smuggling £120million of cocaine hidden in rolls of artificial grass. The National Crime Agency said he planned to 'flood UK streets with drugs' after receiving 20 deliveries of the Class A substance from the Netherlands, which he stashed in warehouses in Stockton-on-Tees and Newcastle. Advertisement The vile work of Lamb - who was sentenced to 17 years on June 27 - and other dealers has contributed to 77 drug-related deaths in Gateshead between 2020 and 2023. That works out at 13.7 per 100,000 people losing their lives, more than double the national rate of 5.5, and the effects are clear to see in Gateshead. At midday when The Sun visited this week, one inebriated woman was curled into a ball outside a shop, while another man was seen in a zombie-like state strewn across the curb by a bus stop. A group of men congregated around the town's refurbished Trinity Square complex in full view of shoppers. Advertisement The development was installed in 2011 as part of a £150m regeneration which included a cinema, new shops and bars. You get people sitting around here and they will search inside ash trays to see what they can get. It's definitely a different place to what I grew up in Sean McGarrell NHS worker Lisa Birnie, 50, said: "I don't like coming down to the centre anymore. I used to walk through it all the time but now it gives me anxiety. "I would come on my own but you see people on drugs all of the time. "It's not just drugs either, they drink on the seats around here. It's more so older people that you see on them. Advertisement "You get people in their twenties but it reaches people in their fifties and sixties. I wouldn't even take the kids to the cinema now, it's that bad around here." Sean McGarrell, 47, said: "I hadn't heard of what happened at Harlow Green but [drug-taking] is a big issue in Gateshead. "I see [users] off their faces walking around like zombies, that's what it's like during the day. "You see them around Tesco and places around the centre when you turn a corner. Advertisement "I don't know specifically what they take but I imagine it's anything they can get their hands on. "It's hard to know if there is enough help out there for them. I suppose it's up to them if they want to get it. "You get people sitting around here and they will search inside ash trays to see what they can get. It's definitely a different place to what I grew up in." 'Diabolical situation' 11 Sean McGarrell said seeing people 'off their faces walking around like zombies' is normal now in Gateshead Credit: NNP Advertisement 11 Homeless Kevin Kent said drugs being sold on the street are getting worryingly stronger Credit: NNP Figures released by Gateshead Council revealed that drug use contributed to 19.7 deaths per 100,000 in 2021 - that's up by a whopping 339 per cent from 1990. Homeless 42-year-old Kevin Kent sits around the corner perched in his sleeping bag while passersby offer him cash and food. Kevin openly admits he is a crack cocaine addict and was hospitalised twice last week because of a bad batch of tablets. Advertisement He said: "It is an epidemic in Gateshead and has been for ten years. I love crack, it is a habit. You wish your next hit will get you that little bit higher. "It's a diabolical situation. The drugs get stamped on before they get here, meaning they're contaminated It is an epidemic in Gateshead and has been for ten years Kevin Kent "The less you pay, the more it's been stamped and therefore more dangerous. But these days it's mainly the tablets that are causing the problems. "Lots of my friends have died because of dodgy drugs, but they don't get classed as 'dodgy' - instead, people say they took too much. Advertisement "I had some blues the other day which came from India and ended up in hospital, I didn't know what was inside them. "Unless you grow the crop yourself, you don't know what you're taking, but that's the risk I take because I'm an addict. "If you cut up cocaine you can tell its strength depending on its colour, but with tablets you can't." Death-count rising 11 Recovering addict Justin Collier is glad he no longer uses drugs Credit: NNP Advertisement Justin Collier, a 54-year-old council worker, originally from Whitley Bay, North Tyneside, said: "Drugs is an issue in Gateshead but it's one that nobody wants to look at. "It is a societal problem. We push them to one side and only look at ourselves - there is our normal life, and there's an underworld that most people don't know about. "Years ago it used to be cocaine and crack, but now there's more things you can get your hands on online. "I am in recovery myself and thank God I'm not addicted anymore. A lot of what they are taking is opioids, but what type of pain are they trying to kill? Advertisement "They are human beings and I sympathise with them, but I don't condone what they get up to." Justin added: "There is always hope, and that's what you have to cling onto." Gateshead Council's Director of Public Health, Alice Wiseman, said: "It's incredibly sad to hear about a life lost to drugs in our area. "We know that far too many lives are lost to drugs in Gateshead every year.' Advertisement We know that far too many lives are lost to drugs in Gateshead every year Alice Wiseman, Gateshead Council's Director of Public Health She told us there have been 300 deaths by drugs in the 20 years to 2022 and the number of losses are quickly rising. "Behind each number is a story of a life lost too soon, and of loved ones left behind, grappling with grief,' Alice said. "Reducing the stigma around drugs in our society is the best way we can support people living with addiction to get the help they need. "While the only way to avoid all risks is to not take any drugs which are not prescribed for you, people who use drugs can reduce the risk of harm by never using alone, avoiding mixing substances, including alcohol, and making sure to look out for any signs of an overdose – including loss of consciousness, shallow or absent breathing, and blue coloured lips or fingertips.' Advertisement GETTING HELP: If you think that you have a drug addiction then please contact your GP. You can also If you are having trouble finding the right help, call the FRANK drugs helpline on 03001236600 Or Addressing drug users directly, she said 'you are not alone' and that 'help is always available', signposting them to The Recovery Partnership Gateshead. A Northumbria Police spokesperson said the force is investigating a potential link between the death of the man in his 40s and four other cardiac arrests. They said: "Given the similarities of these reports from the same area, it is important that we ensure this warning message is shared far and wide. "If you are a drug user, or know anybody struggling with addiction, please be mindful of this message as we suspect this particular batch could have fatal consequences. Advertisement "Anyone with information is asked to get in touch by sending a DM [direct message] or use live chat and report forms on the Force's website." For help, the