Oral Answers to Questions — Resettlement (Training Allowances) – in the House of Commons at 12:00 am on 14 June 1945.
In putting this Question, may I be allowed to thank you, Mr. Speaker, and previous Speakers for the many courtesies I have received during the 38 years I have been a Member of the House? I would like also to thank the Clerks at the Table for similar courtesies.
I think the right hon. Member must have in mind two quite separate incidents. On the afternoon of 3rd June, a house in Finchley was entered and jewellery was stolen of an estimated value of £14,000. Some furs and a safe containing documents and £3,000 in cash were also stolen. On the night of 5th–6th June, four men attacked the watchman at a warehouse in Watford and tied him up. They then removed over 2,500,000 cigarettes, to the value of £11,000, in a lorry. Inquiries are being vigorously pursued by the police in both cases, but no arrests have yet been made.
Can the right hon. and learned Gentleman say what 2,000,000 cigarettes were doing in a house at Finchley?
They were in a warehouse in Watford.
When the right hon. and learned Gentleman gets definite information, will he be good enough to send it to me?
Are not many of the thefts that are happening all over the place due to the fact that the police are understaffed and many of them too old?
The demands that have been made on the police and those who have joined the police forces have been very great indeed, and the police have had great difficulties to meet. I fully agree with my hon. and gallant Friend that the question of recruiting-younger men to the police forces is very important, and it is a matter which we have under very active consideration.
Are not investments in jewellery a means of escaping payment of Income Tax?
Is it not a fact that this is no more than a crude development of uncontrolled private enterprise?