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POLICE CUTBACKS BLAMED AS DORSET CRIME SOARS


SERIOUS crime is rocketing in Dorset but fewer offenders are being caught, latest figures have revealed.

The most serious violent crimes were up 10.5 per cent, less serious assaults up 7.9 per cent and robbery up 7.8 per cent.

Burglary and vehicle crime have risen by 4.8 per cent and 3.5 per cent respectively.

The figures are revealed in the Dorset Police Performance Report, which was presented to the county’s police authority this week.

Statistics also show the crime detection rate is down nearly three per cent to 24.5 per cent.

The report also found the number of people killed or seriously injured in crashes rose by two per cent.

And the number of telephone calls answered within recommended time limits missed the target.

Political leaders blamed government rules that makes the county the second worst funded police force in the country.

Cllr Anne Rey, leader of Bournemouth council’s Independent group, said: “My husband was robbed two months ago but the police are under so much pressure it took them nearly a week before any of the witnesses were interviewed.”

Many police forces are cutting jobs including neighbouring Hampshire, which is shedding 100 police posts.

Head of Dorset Police Federation Clive Chamberlain said: “This year, 43 Dorset police posts will go.

“It’s a crime, that at a time when the home secretary is saying crime will go up during a recession, police orces are having to cut staff.

“We also have concerns the cuts are coming in the wrong places – I have never heard people say they want more back room staff.”

Dorset’s crime figures come off the back of historic lows – burglary and crime are still down around 60 per cent on 10 years ago.

Cllr Ray Nottage, chairman of East Dorset Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnership, said crime is still much lower than the national average.

Asher Nardone, one of a group of residents who have campaigning for action over crime on Poole’s Rossmore estate, said: “We have found the police blame the CPS for not prosecuting cases, and the CPS blame the police for not getting the evidence.

“The whole system is flawed – we are working to laws which are about 100 years behind current trends.”

A Dorset criminal solicitor said: “I think the problem is the police are extremely busy. They often seem to be on duty well beyond their basic hours.”

Assistant Chief Constable Mike Glanville said the very newest figures from April onwards, not included in the performance report showed a year on year drop in robbery of 17 per cent.

He said vehicle crime and commercial burglaries were all down, though domestic burglary had gone up by 17.4 per cent.

“Overall crime is coming down and crime levels here are low. There are always trends and at the moment there is a national increase in acquisitive crime,” said Ass Chf Con Glanville. “You also have to look at the numbers involved – a drop of 20 offences equates to a 19 per cent reduction in serious crimes.

“We could always do with more resources and we have increased demand from new forms of contact, but in terms of the overall picture we are performing very well compared to similar forces.”

Read the report in full, click the link

Dorset Police Report.pdf

delicious again Want to know more about crime statistics? We've bookmarked some interesting links here



Your Say YourEcho

ferret38, bournemouth says...
9:04am Thu 16 Jul 09

what we also need is tuff decent judge that wont give out micky mouse sentences ..

jobsworthwatch, Bournemouth says...
9:05am Thu 16 Jul 09

A sign of the tmes....we're becoming a third world country!

jobsworthwatch, Bournemouth says...
9:11am Thu 16 Jul 09

ferret38 wrote:
what we also need is tuff decent judge that wont give out micky mouse sentences ..
Its the likelihood of being caught thats the deterrent rather than the severity of the punishment, sounds as if we need more police.

West Howe Sean, Bournemouth says...
9:34am Thu 16 Jul 09

We need a police force that understands it is there to serve the community.

The Police should be accountable to us. We pay their wages.

We should be setting the agenda.

davep1, Dorset says...
9:45am Thu 16 Jul 09

and the local council can spend 150 odd grand a year plus on invented jobs but we can't afford police. What a messed up world that puts profit above peoples safety

magicmonkey, Bournemouth says...
10:00am Thu 16 Jul 09

Still lots of time for prosecuting motorists though - that pays, right?!?

cardomon, Bournemouth says...
10:48am Thu 16 Jul 09

A little less time spent looking at accidents on the spur road, and a bit more time actually fighting crime might help.

Julie G, Christchurch says...
11:00am Thu 16 Jul 09

I think the trouble nowaday is that the Police arent held in the same regard as they used to. Back when I was a kid, you feared the Police, they stood for authority and if you got into trouble with them you would have hell to pay from your parents. Its seems the Police are not taken seriously anymore as there doesnt seem to be any major consequences for illegal activity!

Tripod, Poole says...
11:03am Thu 16 Jul 09

"police orces are having to cut staff".

There's the problem, put people in charge, not "Orces".

Security word "well-hang"!

dan ecan, bournemouth says...
11:25am Thu 16 Jul 09

Its time for C.C.Baker to clear his desk.There must be change.

dan ecan, bournemouth says...
11:25am Thu 16 Jul 09

Its time for C.C.Baker to clear his desk.There must be change.

anderton, whitecliff says...
11:46am Thu 16 Jul 09

Police investigating complaints against police,thats a laugh.

golden mouldie, Bournemouth says...
12:03pm Thu 16 Jul 09

"East Dorset Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnership"
There ya go. Get rid of that quango and employ more police with the money it costs.

Laurie H Marsh, brisbane says...
12:19pm Thu 16 Jul 09

magicmonkey wrote:
Still lots of time for prosecuting motorists though - that pays, right?!?
Eureka!
That is the answer!
Put on 300 police with 100 of them in the traffic branch.
The extra 100 will pay for the other 200!
Next problem?

nigel24, Bournemouth says...
12:30pm Thu 16 Jul 09

Would the Daily Echo do a Freedom Of Information request to see how many active,fit Police Officers are sat behind desk dong task like community safety and other such task in which could be done by medically restricted officers, retired officers or members of the public.They were trained to police our streets and not sit behind desk on a 9 to 5 basis,5 days a week.I think we might be horrified at to how many there are.

anderton, whitecliff says...
1:05pm Thu 16 Jul 09

nigel24 wrote:
Would the Daily Echo do a Freedom Of Information request to see how many active,fit Police Officers are sat behind desk dong task like community safety and other such task in which could be done by medically restricted officers, retired officers or members of the public.They were trained to police our streets and not sit behind desk on a 9 to 5 basis,5 days a week.I think we might be horrified at to how many there are.
Nigel, have you got a contact number

free wessex, Bridport says...
1:16pm Thu 16 Jul 09

Got the Olympic Sailing to police yet
that will mess the budget up further!!

dan ecan, bournemouth says...
1:18pm Thu 16 Jul 09

Davep 1. If you think thats bad ask how much of the tax payers money Dorset Police give to common porpose. Along with Bournemouth Council ?

BobbyPoole, poole says...
1:40pm Thu 16 Jul 09

jobsworthwatch wrote:
A sign of the tmes....we're becoming a third world country!
should say "third world COUNTY" dorset police second lowest funded force in country. borough of Poole 4th lowest funded council in country for education

castiron, Swanage says...
1:45pm Thu 16 Jul 09

Tripod wrote:
"police orces are having to cut staff".

There's the problem, put people in charge, not "Orces".

Security word "well-hang"!
I thought the whole point of the report was that there's no F in forces?

themindboggles, bournemouth says...
2:50pm Thu 16 Jul 09

The Police are corrupt.

nigel24, Bournemouth says...
4:14pm Thu 16 Jul 09

anderton wrote:
nigel24 wrote:
Would the Daily Echo do a Freedom Of Information request to see how many active,fit Police Officers are sat behind desk dong task like community safety and other such task in which could be done by medically restricted officers, retired officers or members of the public.They were trained to police our streets and not sit behind desk on a 9 to 5 basis,5 days a week.I think we might be horrified at to how many there are.
Nigel, have you got a contact number
Hello Anderton.

My email address is nigelgillespie@hotma
il.co.uk

Chris..., says...
4:35pm Thu 16 Jul 09

I agree with West Howe Sean. Far too much of our money is paid out or given out on stupid projects that are no good to man or beast. We have had recently problems with national government over money, it is time to look into the Councils. Do we need so many in a Cabinet, do we need three councillors per ward. Going on the amount of work that goes on, I would say no.

The money from this could fund more Police, or at least fund civilian staff to do more of the internal work, allowing the Police Officers to do what they are meant to do.

Until our money is used for the reasons it is given, we will never rid our towns of crime, or abate it in anyway.


West Howe Sean, Bournemouth says...
4:48pm Thu 16 Jul 09

I think you mean. Some police are corrupt

Insurgent, poole says...
8:26pm Thu 16 Jul 09

The Gov't made the mess this county is in, how can it be that ANY Police jobs are going? We need more Police regardless of the cost.

pipistrollers, Bournemouth says...
11:03pm Thu 16 Jul 09

We keep saying that if the PCSO's were to be put in the offices typing up reports etc and the regular police were out on the streets, it would help a lot as most the police officers' time is spent in typing up reports etc.

2Much...again!, Ringwood says...
7:57am Fri 17 Jul 09

I agree, but those were the days when they were able to clip you round the ear and move on to the next muppet. Nowadays, they can't do that, or they'll have the complaints section on them..instead they arrest them..drive them to the station (calling them sir/madam..a title i believe should be earned) then spend hours filling in statements, until they are free to get back out on the roads.
Ridiculous system!

Fightingback, christchurch says...
10:19am Fri 17 Jul 09

The trouble is no-one respects the police anymore and they get their priorities wrong - an example being stopping cyclists going over 10mph on the prom.

Too many act like thugs and are corrupt.

The officers are the worse and completely unaccountable despite the IPCC.

I had my home broken into - with a search warrant - only for the police to admit that they shouldn't have done so as they didn't follow the correct legal procedure.

Despite this admission, made in court 6 years ago I'm still in litigation with them for repairs to my door.

The police have failed us and things will only get worse.

Laurie H Marsh, brisbane says...
12:46pm Fri 17 Jul 09

When I was a kid (in Throop) I shot at a smart mouthed kid (who was disapearing on his bike) with a catapult of grit picked up from the road.
The kid told his dad, who told the local Bobby.
The Bobby rode up on his bike, confiscated my catapult and told my old man that he had better do something about it or (and I quote), "That little creeps father will take it further!".
I got a belting and eveyone got on with their lives!
I made a new catapult the day after.
I also met up with the kid three weeks later.
We all learnt a lesson!

Pyrrho, Upton says...
1:41pm Fri 17 Jul 09

A couple of minutes review of the actual report seems to show that the "10.5%" increase in "most serious violent crimes" is actually due to a redefinition of the category. Great reporting, well done - keep the moral panic burning!!

fedupwithjobsworths, Moordown says...
2:49pm Fri 17 Jul 09

Every week there are lots of Clowncil non-jobs advertised in the echo. Why is money always available to employ these non-technical idiots but never any to employ more Police?

Wimbourneflyer, Wimbourne says...
9:00pm Fri 17 Jul 09

This is just more sloppy, lazy anti-police reporting and use of figures by the Echo to boost dwindling cirulation.

Just like when the Echo claimed that Dorset Police were 'hiding crime figures' when all of the time Dorset Police had all of their crime figures available on the front page of their website! What lazy journalism.

Dorset Police has the HIGHEST confidence rating of any police force in England & Wales yet is at the same time the second LOWEST funded force in England & Wales.

Surely that says they must be doing something right?

Lazy, lazy reporting which, yet again, only paints half the picture.

Yaaaaaaaaaaawn

Wimbourneflyer, Wimbourne says...
7:40pm Sat 18 Jul 09

Fightingback wrote:
The trouble is no-one respects the police anymore and they get their priorities wrong - an example being stopping cyclists going over 10mph on the prom.

Too many act like thugs and are corrupt.

The officers are the worse and completely unaccountable despite the IPCC.

I had my home broken into - with a search warrant - only for the police to admit that they shouldn't have done so as they didn't follow the correct legal procedure.

Despite this admission, made in court 6 years ago I'm still in litigation with them for repairs to my door.

The police have failed us and things will only get worse.
What do you mean they get their priorities wrong.

The police's local priorities are set by the public - who vote on what the 3 priorities should be and they do this at a safer neighbourhood meeting, which was brought in by the government to give the public more say on what issues the police tackle.

So, if you don't like it blame the government for bringing the idea in or go along to a safer neighbourhood meeting and vote on something else other than speeding cyclists.

In any case, from what I remember, most people on here were in favour of the police and council trying to tackle speeding cyclists as they were fed up with accidents and near misses on the prom and on the pavements of Bournemouth.

So it seems that the police were listening to local people and doing something about it.

you can please some of the people.....

Comments are closed on this article.

NUMBERS AT RISK: Police officers in Dorset IT'S A CRIME

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