Only 1 in 400 anti-terror stop and searches leads to arrest
Only one in every 400 stop and searches carried out under sweeping anti-terrorism laws leads to an arrest, official figures released yesterday reveal, triggering fresh pressure on the government and police over the controversial tactic.
Official government figures covering 2005/6, the first since the July 7 2005 bombings on London, show a big increase in the use of the power, with Asian people bearing the brunt. One force, City of London, carried out 6,846 stops of pedestrians and vehicles without finding enough evidence to justify a single arrest.
Stops under the Terrorism Act 2000 rely more on an officer’s discretion than other powers to search, which require reasonable suspicion. The number of stops under terrorism laws in 2005/6 showed a 34% rise on the previous year to 44,543. Asians faced an increase of 84%, black people an increase of 51%, searches of “other” ethnic groups rose 36% and white people faced a 24% increase.
The biggest increases were in London, with the Metropolitan police carrying out more than half of all terrorism stop and searches and the City of London force 15%.
Experts believe anti-terrorism stop and searches have not led to a single person being caught who was later convicted of a terrorist offence. [complete article]
Related Posts...
- Is CISPA, SOPA 2.0? The new cybersecurity bill explained
- Facebook and Google turned into government spies? The dangerous new law before Congress (CISPA)
- 39 ways to limit free speech
- Why I’m suing the U.S. government to protect internet freedom
- How Britain destroyed the father of computer science
- Video: The U.S. military’s ‘anti-Islam classes’
- Why profiling Muslims is a dumb idea
- Meet the former right-wing blogger who realized conservatives are crazy
- Senator Russ Feingold takes on Islamophobia
- He’s not alone: Breivik and the rising sea of radical Islamophobia in Europe
- Schools in the Texas police state
- The growing militarisation of police
- Obama and the rule of law
- Predator drones employed by U.S. police
- When police go military
- Drones, missiles and gunships: Welcome to the 2012 London Olympics
- UK ‘exporting surveillance technology to repressive nations’
- Video — The UK ‘snooping’ plan: Security vs privacy
- George Galloway’s Respect could help Britain to break the political impasse
- George Galloway’s Bradford Spring
Related Posts...
Related Posts...
Related Posts...
Related Posts...
Previous post: ANALYSIS: Russia did not lose the Cold War
Next post: NEWS: Blair’s pathetic choice
