4 million shootings, stabbings, assaults - UK

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Violent crime 'four times higher' than reported
By Jason Beattie Political Correspondent, Evening Standard
20 October 2004

Home Secretary David Blunkett was warned today in a report on firearms that violent crime may be four times higher than official estimates.

Figures due out tomorrow will show the number of shootings, stabbings and assaults in England and Wales rose to 1.1 million last year.

But experts in today's report claim that as many as three million violent crimes went unreported last year, meaning the real toll could be more than four million.

Its author, Professor Jonathan Shepherd, said there was a danger of shootings in some British cities reaching levels similar to the United States. "Only about a quarter or a third of all violent offences appear in official police records," the report said.

Professor Shepherd, who heads the Violence and Society Research Group at Cardiff University, said many violent offences, particularly those connected with shootings and drug crimes, went unreported.

He added: "Substantial numbers of violent offences, even the majority in some locations like nightclubs, are not reported. In drug-related shootings it may not be seen as a priority on the part of anyone involved for the offence to be reported." Research indicates that the proportion of shootings reported to police could be even lower.

The British report looked at the situation in America, where the number of shootings reported to the police compared with those treated in hospital was one in five.

"There is no reason to think the proportion is dissimilar in cities in Britain," he said.

The findings back Conservative claims that the Government has failed to recognise the scale of the problem.

The rise in violent crime has continued to embarrass ministers at a time when rates for other crimes such as burglary and car theft have continued to fall. The warning over violence came as the Association of Police Authorities warned that police forces in England and Wales face a ?350 million funding shortfall.

The association's chairman, Baroness Henig, said the forces needed a 5.7 per cent increase but might only receive three per cent for 2005-2006.

Home Office minister Hazel Blears said they would be looking at the figures before a decision was made. She added: "I'm not going to say how much they are going to get but we are proceeding in drawing up the settlement."

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/articles/14149500?source=Evening Standard
 
Figures due out tomorrow will show the number of shootings, stabbings and assaults in England and Wales rose to 1.1 million last year.
<sarcasm>That is impossible. Guns are banned in England. I don't see how there could be *any* shootings in England!

What's that? Criminals don't care about gun laws?!?! Gun laws only affect law-abiding citizens who, by definition, don't commit crimes?

I don't believe it. The gun ban makes us all safer... doesn't it? </sarcasm>
 
Let me guess...

"Since so many crimes were unreported in the past, it's irresponsible to say that violent crime has risen this year. The statistics illustrate why we need not only our handgun ban, but a knife ban as well: to reduce the frequency of these horrific violent crimes. We can speed up the process by placing more unarmed police on the streets and deploying more video cameras, which aid the identification of criminals who are carrying illegal weapons like knives and guns."

:rolleyes:
 
Note that the focus here is on "more police funding" - as if that is issue.

Handy,

Figure that a similar percentage exists here in the USA. Rape is widely held to be a very under-reported crime both here and in other countries. Many common street assaults go unreported. I come across a fair number of people that do not want to or otherwise fail to make a police report for various reasons; often an expressed lack of faith in any meaningful action, no credible witnesses to back them up, or they fear reprisals.
 
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