Results 181–200 of 10000 for crime statistics

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Written Answers — Home Office: Missing Persons (14 Sep 2023)

Sarah Dines: The Home Office does not hold this data centrally. Information about current missing persons incidents is held by individual police forces. The National Crime Agency’s UK Missing Persons Unit holds the national database for all missing incidents that are unresolved after 72hours, allowing the police to have access to missing persons information across force boundaries. In addition, annual...

Scottish Parliament: Police Scotland Budget (Body-Worn Cameras) (14 Sep 2023)

Douglas Ross: The First Minister is getting angry again. Either a civil servant has not put this statistic in his briefing pack or he is not reading it. Police officer numbers in Scotland under the SNP are now at their lowest level in 14 years. I say to the First Minister that that is a fact, and that is what we are facing on the streets of Scotland right now. Police Scotland will be the last force in the...

High Street Heritage and Conservation Areas — [Yvonne Fovargue in the Chair] (13 Sep 2023)

Sarah Owen: .... The decline in the beauty of our high streets leads to a decline in custom and standards of behaviour too. It has been mentioned already that abandoned town centres have become hotspots for crime in recent years. That is why the Labour shadow Home Secretary has committed to reintroducing respect orders, which will hold perpetrators of antisocial behaviour to account and restore community...

2. Questions to the Counsel General and Minister for the Constitution: Data on the Justice System (13 Sep 2023)

Mick Antoniw: ...August and this makes data available about youth justice easier to find in one place. Analysts are currently developing the remaining dashboards that will deal with areas such as courts, prisons, crime recurrences, legal aid, workforce statistics, and again, with the view of making these publicly available. But it does move away from a point that I raised yesterday with the Under-Secretary...

Written Answers — Ministry of Justice: Crime: Staffordshire (13 Sep 2023)

Damian Hinds: We know that drug and alcohol related crime blights communities and drives reoffending, so it is essential the Criminal Justice System tackles substance misuse and supports offenders into treatment. This is why MoJ have introduced the Alcohol Abstinence and Monitoring Requirement (AAMR) to tackle alcohol related offending. The AAMR imposes an alcohol ban for up to 120 days, with compliance...

Online Safety Bill: Clause 82 - General duties of OFCOM under section 3 of the Communications Act (12 Sep 2023)

Caroline Dinenage: ...years, virtually no one else knows more about this vital issue. It is absolutely right that the cornerstone and priority of the Bill must be to protect children. The Minister mentioned that the statistics are absolutely horrible and disturbing. That is why it is important that the Secretary of State will now be able to require providers to retain data relating to child sexual exploitation...

Written Answers — Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities: Hate Crime: Sikhs (11 Sep 2023)

Lee Rowley: All forms of racial and religious discrimination are abhorrent and have no place in our communities. The Government continues to work with police and community partners to monitor and combat crime. The Home Office publishes statistics which can be found at: Hate crime, England and Wales, 2021 to 2022 - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk).

Written Answers — Home Office: Fraud: Convictions (11 Sep 2023)

Thomas Tugendhat: The Home Office collects data on the number of fraud and computer misuse cases reported to Action Fraud that have been recorded as crimes by the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB). Such data is published by the Office for National Statistics on a quarterly basis and the most recently available statistics for the year ending March 2023 can be found here:...

Written Answers — Home Office: National Rural Crime Unit (11 Sep 2023)

Chris Philp: The Home Office collects and publishes information on crime against business, including the agriculture, forestry and fishing sector, as part of the Commercial Victimisation Survey. Such crimes will also form part of the published police recorded crime statistics. However, neither of these data sources provides detail on the specific items stolen from vehicles or the methods used in...

Written Answers — Home Office: Public Sector: Crimes of Violence (11 Sep 2023)

Philip Davies: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to the Answer of 11 July 2023 to Question 192042 on Public Sector: Crimes of Violence, if she will take steps to ensure that information on the number of assaults of other public service workers is separately identifiable in the Police recorded crime and outcomes statistics.

Written Answers — Home Office: Bicycles: Theft (11 Sep 2023)

Chris Philp: The Crime Survey for England and Wales for year ending March 2023 shows that the level of bicycle theft offences has reduced by 51% since March 2010. The Home Office works closely with the British Transport Police (BTP), the national lead for cycle theft, to tackle the theft of bicycles. BTP have launched the ‘double lock it’ campaign with police forces and organisations, providing advice...

Public Bill Committee: Economic Activity of Public Bodies (Overseas Matters) Bill: Examination of Witnesses ( 7 Sep 2023)

...within the green line and the occupied territories. I am being very clear about what that says in relation to what the UK Government are saying about the Russian occupation in Ukraine, and the crimes that are being committed in that context. It is a really important question because we should be thinking about community cohesion from both sides of the coin. What the Bill essentially says...

Illegal Migration Update - Statement ( 6 Sep 2023)

Lord Murray of Blidworth: ...such an abuse of the system. The third was the massive increases in civil penalties for illegal working and for renting to those who are not entitled to do so. Fourthly, on the very satisfactory statistics in relation to returns, I need not remind the House that 3,500 Albanians have been returned in recent times—a 90% reduction in the numbers arriving on small boats. Fifthly, my right...

Online Safety Bill - Third Reading: Motion ( 6 Sep 2023)

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay: ...in children’s safety online. Last month, data from UK police forces showed that 6,350 offences relating to sexual communications with a child were recorded last year alone. These are horrifying statistics which underline the importance of the Bill in building a protective shield for our children online. We cannot let perpetrators of such abhorrent crimes stalk children online and hide...

Non-disclosure Agreements in the Workplace — [Rushanara Ali in the Chair] ( 5 Sep 2023)

Mary Robinson: ...Revolution, which works with Can’t Buy My Silence as a data partner, is actively collecting workplace bullying and harassment experiences from members of the public, and compiling information and statistics. Based on those submissions, 63% do not formally report their workplace bullying or harassment experiences to their organisation. Of those who do, just 3% reach a full resolution. It...

Scottish Parliament: Programme for Government 2023-24 ( 5 Sep 2023)

.... We will invest in our prisons while working with community justice partners to reduce reoffending and create safer communities. We will continue to focus on ensuring that victims and witnesses of crime are at the heart of our justice system. We live in times when the rights of women in many parts of the world are regressing. It is important for Governments that believe passionately in...

Written Answers — Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities: Hinduism: Discrimination ( 4 Sep 2023)

Lee Rowley: Anti-Hindu hatred is abhorrent and has no place in our communities. The Government continues to work with police and community partners to monitor and combat it. The Home Office publishes statistics which can be found at: Hate crime, England and Wales, 2021 to 2022 - GOV.UK.

Written Answers — Home Office: Retail Trade: Artificial Intelligence (27 Jul 2023)

Lord Sharpe of Epsom: Shops are at the heart of our communities and neighbourhoods, and it is important that businesses are free to trade without fear of crime or disorder. Innovative technologies have huge potential to cut crime and reduce the cost of crime to businesses, as well as making workplaces and communities safer. I am keen to support increased adoption of new technologies to prevent crime including...

Written Answers — Home Office: Extradition (26 Jul 2023)

Lord Sharpe of Epsom: ...a conviction warrant, as this assumes they will not be facing trial in the requested state on return. Extraditions from the UK under Part 1 of the Extradition Act 2003 are handled by the National Crime Agency and statistics are published on their website: https://nationalcrimeagency.gov.uk/what-we-do/how-we-work/pr oviding-specialist-capabilities-for-law-enforcement/fugitive...

Advanced Artificial Intelligence - Motion to Take Note (24 Jul 2023)

Viscount Waverley: ...that shows us the bigger picture in a vast, complex, and detailed chain over which no single country, or corporate, should ever have overall control. Caution must be assured that every data point, statistical analysis and prediction model be spot on. There may be dire consequences if we are ever reliant on data that is unverified, inaccurate or misleading due to misunderstandings of...


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