Notts Police given extra cash to target serious violent crime
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The force is one of 18 being given a share of an additional £4.12 million from the Home Office to to increase ‘Hotspot Policing’ in areas blighted by violent crime.
It comes after a trial in Essex ‘resulted in a 73.5 per cent drop in violent crime in the 20 highest crime hotspots in Southend’.
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Hide AdKit Malthouse, policing minister, said: “The Government is working hard to confront violence in all its forms and make neighbourhoods safe.
“People want police officers visible on their streets, stopping violence and protecting people from harm and exploitation.
“That is what our smart new approach to hotspot policing does and I am delighted to see the tactic is already reducing high harm crime in some areas and look forward to this success being replicated in other towns and cities across the country.”
The tactic involves operating regular, intensive, high-visibility police foot patrols for short periods of time within areas where there is a risk of serious violence.
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Hide AdFollowing the Essex pilot’s success, 18 forces most affected by serious violence when the scheme launched in 2019 – including Nottinghamshire – will be given funding.
The Home Office said police data analysis will inform which areas in those forces are most at risk of violent crime and where the patrols should be targeted.
‘Incredibly serious’
Assistant Chief Constable Jackie Sebire, National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for serious violent crime, said: “The damage caused to lives, particularly young ones, by violence is incredibly serious and tackling this issue is a priority for policing across the country.
“There is good evidence that when done effectively, hotspot patrols can have a sustained impact on violence reduction. This additional funding is greatly welcomed as it will build on our understanding of what works.
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Hide Ad“The Hotspots strategy, in combination with the partnerships police have formed with violence reduction units, shows our commitment to supporting communities and our young people in the prevention of serious youth violence.”
Det Chief Insp Lewis Basford, of Essex Police, who designed the hotspot policing as part his masters degree in criminology from Cambridge University, said: “This is simply police doing high-visibility policing. It’s nothing new, but it does get results.”