This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-26626111
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Leicestershire chief constable: Stop and search more often | Leicestershire chief constable: Stop and search more often |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The chief constable of Leicestershire Police has said he wants to use stop and search more. | The chief constable of Leicestershire Police has said he wants to use stop and search more. |
The force was criticised by the Equality and Human Rights Commission in 2010 for disproportionately using the tactic on black males. | The force was criticised by the Equality and Human Rights Commission in 2010 for disproportionately using the tactic on black males. |
But Simon Cole said that since then the force had more than halved its use of stop and search. | |
Arrests made through the technique have doubled, indicating the force is using it more effectively, he said. | Arrests made through the technique have doubled, indicating the force is using it more effectively, he said. |
'Target drug dealers' | 'Target drug dealers' |
"If we stop and search in a professional way, if we explain why it's happening and we do it in a way that's completely transparent and empathetic, I think people understand that it's an area we are working on hugely because of the focus brought on us by the human rights commission," Mr Cole said. | "If we stop and search in a professional way, if we explain why it's happening and we do it in a way that's completely transparent and empathetic, I think people understand that it's an area we are working on hugely because of the focus brought on us by the human rights commission," Mr Cole said. |
"We do it for a reason. We do it because we want to target people who damage the local community. We want to target the drug dealers and people who carry weapons." | "We do it for a reason. We do it because we want to target people who damage the local community. We want to target the drug dealers and people who carry weapons." |
But he said that "50/50 proportionality" in relation to the sex or race of people who are stopped and searched is unlikely ever to be achieved by Leicestershire Police. | But he said that "50/50 proportionality" in relation to the sex or race of people who are stopped and searched is unlikely ever to be achieved by Leicestershire Police. |
Chino Cabon, from Leicester's Race Equality Centre, said that, since the tactic had been scaled back in the county, a black male was now roughly four times as likely as their white counterpart to be stopped and searched, rather than seven times more likely at the time of the report. | |
He said that since the Human Rights and Equality Commission report, police had used better techniques to target people to stop and search. | |
"Simon Cole wants to increase intrusion in people's lives in the city and the county - we need to question whether that benefits anyone," he said. | |
An 18-month agreement was signed in January 2011 after the Human Rights and Equality Commission found the force was unable to properly justify why it was employing the tactic disproportionately. | An 18-month agreement was signed in January 2011 after the Human Rights and Equality Commission found the force was unable to properly justify why it was employing the tactic disproportionately. |
At the time, the commission said black people in Leicestershire were almost five times more likely to be searched than white people, with Asian people almost twice as likely. | At the time, the commission said black people in Leicestershire were almost five times more likely to be searched than white people, with Asian people almost twice as likely. |
The force has since reported an 80% drop in stop and searches - from 25,000 to 5,000 - in the three years leading up to September 2013. | The force has since reported an 80% drop in stop and searches - from 25,000 to 5,000 - in the three years leading up to September 2013. |
Previous version
1
Next version