Three more police forces are in ‘special measures’: One in seven are now failing as the shocking crisis in policing is laid bare
- Three more police forces are being monitored due to poor performance
- Watchdog won’t explain why police not performing or for how long
- Scotland Yard castigated for ‘systemic’ blunders by the police watchdog
- Six out of 43 police forces in England and Wales are under performing
The staggering scale of police failures across the country can today be revealed as a record one in seven forces are now in special measures.
A day after Scotland Yard was castigated for ‘systemic’ blunders by the police watchdog, the Daily Mail has learnt that three more forces – on top of three already known about – are currently being monitored due to poor performance.
Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services (HMICFRS) has confirmed it is currently dealing with the highest ever number of failing forces. However, the inspectorate faced heavy criticism yesterday as it emerged the public are not automatically informed which forces are under the special measures – known as being in an ‘engage phase’. It will also not provide any details about why police are not performing or how long they have been under the measures.
Yesterday HMICFRS said its ‘policy’ was not to reveal any details about the forces involved.
Patsy Stevenson is arrested by Metropolitan Police officers at a vigil in memory of Sarah Everard on Clapham Common, London, on March 13 2021. A day after Scotland Yard was castigated for ‘systemic’ blunders by the police watchdog, the Daily Mail has learnt that three more forces – on top of three already known about – are currently being monitored due to poor performance
Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services (HMICFRS) has confirmed it is currently dealing with the highest ever number of failing forces
The inspectorate faced heavy criticism yesterday as it emerged the public are not automatically informed which forces are under the special measures – known as being in an ‘engage phase’. It will also not provide any details about why police are not performing or how long they have been under the measures
But it later confirmed the list of six under-performing forces – out of 43 in England and Wales – included Gloucestershire, Staffordshire and Wiltshire as well as three that have emerged publicly – the Met, Greater Manchester and Cleveland Police.
Details about Scotland Yard’s humiliation only emerged yesterday after a letter confirming it had received the sanction was leaked.
The force has faced a number of high-profile scandals in recent years, including the disastrous Operation Midland inquiry into spurious VIP child sex abuse allegations and the murder of Sarah Everard by serving officer Wayne Couzens. The force was subsequently also accused of ‘manhandling’ women at a vigil for the 33-year-old marketing executive.
Yesterday Victims’ Commissioner Vera Baird described the secrecy surrounding failing forces as ‘completely appalling’. She said: ‘The public should know which police are performing and which ones are not.
The force has faced a number of high-profile scandals in recent years, including the murder of Sarah Everard (pictured) by serving officer Wayne Couzens
Yesterday Victims’ Commissioner Vera Baird (pictured) described the secrecy surrounding failing forces as ‘completely appalling’. She said: ‘The public should know which police are performing and which ones are not
‘There has been a focus on the Met, but actually this shows some of those failures are widespread. This needs to be made clear if forces are to be held to account.
‘For this to be kept secret from the public at a time of a crisis in confidence in policing is unbelievable.’ Harriet Wistrich, founder and director of the Centre for Women’s Justice, said: ‘There is huge concern about policing at the moment and the lack of transparency and accountability.
‘If the public don’t know that a force is under special measures, how can that force be held to account? This is really concerning. It will do nothing for trust and confidence in policing.’
HMICFRS introduced the policy around five years ago that if a force is not responding to a cause of concern, it should face ‘advanced’ external monitoring and have to come up with an improvement plan. It refused to say the total number of forces that have received the judgment yesterday, but confirmed that it is currently dealing with the highest ever number of forces needing help at one time.
A spokesman said: ‘We report publicly and transparently on the performance of every police force in England and Wales… we also report accelerated causes of concern as and when they arise.’
It’s time to shut down the failed, vast, arrogant monster our police forces have become
By Peter Hitchens
Like some dud bog-standard school, Britain’s most important law-enforcers, the Metropolitan Police, find themselves humiliatingly condemned to ‘special measures’. About time too.
Now we have also learned that one in seven police forces is in special measures. Quite frankly, I’m not surprised.
The howling, blatant failure of all Britain’s police forces to do the job for which we pay them so much has been a scandal for years. It has been at its worst in the capital.
Now, at last, even our political class has begun to notice. If we have the sense to seize it, the moment has come to replace our failed police, who have traded for decades on a reputation won by others many years ago.
Normally the liberal elite, cocooned by money and power, have little idea of what is going on in this country. They seldom visit anywhere outside their privileged enclaves, and dismiss reports from the real Britain as ‘moral panic’.
For years they have not cared, as most of us have, that the police are too politically correct, and too absent, to be any use against crime and disorder. Now, it turns out that the police are not politically correct enough, either. Everyone thinks they are useless.
Scotland Yard’s fall comes after it was subjected to the leadership of Cressida Dick – for years the liberal establishment’s favourite police officer, groomed and polished so that she could finally step into the Commissioner’s job. And then she turned out to be an utter flop on almost every measure known.
What are the police for? Why do we put up with them? If your car won’t go, or your hoover stops hoovering, or your fridge no longer keeps your food cold, you get rid of them and buy new ones. So what do you do when your police stop policing?
And they have stopped. Their response to burglary and car theft is now such a national joke that even official statistics have begun to reflect it. Their interest in quelling the nasty disorder that infects so many of our streets is zero.
As Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary said of the Metropolitan Police this week, they suffer from ‘a barely adequate standard of crime recording accuracy, with an estimated 69,000 crimes going unrecorded each year, less than half of crime recorded within 24 hours, and almost no crimes recorded when victims report antisocial behaviour against them’.
The flat phrase ‘anti-social behaviour’ does not begin to describe a huge and horrible problem. For many years, in the long-ago days when people still had some expectation of police support, I was often contacted by despairing men and women trapped in their homes by menacing louts, intolerable noise, screeching persecution or incessant thefts from their small businesses, from which they could not protect themselves.
They knew that if they dared raise a hand in their own defence, the police – protecting their monopoly of force – would come for them. They, unlike their persecutors, were easy targets, not frightening, ready to co-operate with authority.
I remember a lawyer who wrote to me in a state of shock, having had his career ruined by the police after he grabbed a young vandal and tried to march him to the police station. He was the one who ended up in court. We all recall the horrible case of Fiona Pilkington, who killed her own severely disabled daughter Francecca and herself, after enduring ten years of unimaginable persecution from cruel neighbours – in which the police were barely interested.
We all remember Garry Newlove, kicked to death outside his home, after confronting a gang of youths he suspected of vandalising his wife’s car. The area had suffered for years from uncontrolled disorder of this kind.
But these events are not unique. They are among thousands of miserable episodes that never make the headlines, but which show the failure of the police to prevent this kind of thing.
Well, that problem only affected ordinary people, so the authorities, the BBC and The Guardian newspaper paid little attention to it and learned no lesson from it.
But the police reaction to the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving officer – pitiful, lumbering and stupid – probably turned the balance among our governing class. Here was something they could not ignore: a woman had been murdered by someone she should have been able to trust utterly.
How had he been in a position to do this? One problem is that the police, as they now are, do not always attract the right sort of recruits, or retain the kind of men and women they really need.
The killer, Wayne Couzens, was obviously totally unfit to be a police constable.
He should never have been hired in the first place. His blatant lewd behaviour should have made sure that he was got rid of very quickly.
Yet he stayed, and seems to have been too readily tolerated by some of his colleagues. Then came the lumpish, concrete-headed police treatment of a perfectly reasonable vigil in memory of Miss Everard. Once again, the questions began to form, in letters of fire, in the public mind: ‘Whose side are the police really on? What actual use are they?’
I could write a book about the crisis of the police. In fact, I have done. (It is called ‘The Abolition of Liberty’ and is still in print 19 years after it was first published.) I have pressed it into the hands of senior police officers and one Home Secretary, begging them to pay attention. Not one of them has even responded.
The police, I have argued now for almost 20 years, are doing the wrong thing. Their problems have nothing to do with numbers (they used to do far more with many fewer officers).
Their job is not to patrol Twitter, but to patrol the streets on foot, to prevent crime, to show that order and law will be upheld, to deter the first signs of bad behaviour so that it never gets out of hand.
This method still works (it was used to great effect in New York City a few years ago) and it was what they were originally hired to do by the great Sir Robert Peel.
Constables engaged in these simple, comforting activities do not need to get involved in politics or opinions. They rapidly become the friends of the law-abiding public, get to know their neighbourhoods, see trouble coming and pick up intelligence about all kinds of problems.
This kind of policing came to an end thanks to a few decisions mainly taken by the arch-liberal Home Secretary Roy Jenkins in the 1960s. We were never asked about them. Jenkins killed off regular foot patrols, and destroyed dozens of local forces that knew their areas and were respected there, replacing them with vast distant bureaucracies.
In Scotland, even more worryingly, local policing ended entirely with the creation of a nationwide organisation, which has unsurprisingly run into grave trouble since.
It would be just as easy to reverse these decisions, to begin next week to recruit and establish new, small local constabularies dedicated to the old Peel principle of prevention above all. And once they were ready, we could close down the vast, failed, arrogant monster which our police have disastrously become.
There is no longer any point in pretending that they have not failed. And when institutions fail, the best thing to do is to replace them from top to bottom. That would be a truly special measure.
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