In a foreword to the report, Baroness Casey of Blackstock (pictured), who spent a year compiling a review into the Metropolitan Police, said: 'This is worrying and speaks to a fundamental rupture in the bond of trust between the police and the public'

Half of women who experience crime in the past year choose not to report it because of a lack of trust in the police, report suggests

  • Study found policing model was ‘broken’ amid shifting demands on forces

<!–

<!–

<!– <!–

<!–

<!–

<!–

Almost half of women who experienced a crime in the past year chose not to report it due to a lack of faith in the police, a report suggests.

The study from the Tony Blair Institute found the policing model was ‘broken’ amid shifting demands on under-performing forces and a poor charge rate of just 6 per cent.

It found 44 per cent of women who witnessed or had been a victim of crime did not report it. The main reason was because they did not see the point or felt the police would not take it seriously. 

Men appeared to have more confidence in investigators, with 60 per cent of those who experienced crime reporting it to the authorities.

In a foreword to the report, Baroness Casey of Blackstock, who spent a year compiling a review into the Metropolitan Police, said: ‘This is worrying and speaks to a fundamental rupture in the bond of trust between the police and the public.’

In a foreword to the report, Baroness Casey of Blackstock (pictured), who spent a year compiling a review into the Metropolitan Police, said: 'This is worrying and speaks to a fundamental rupture in the bond of trust between the police and the public'

In a foreword to the report, Baroness Casey of Blackstock (pictured), who spent a year compiling a review into the Metropolitan Police, said: 'This is worrying and speaks to a fundamental rupture in the bond of trust between the police and the public'

In a foreword to the report, Baroness Casey of Blackstock (pictured), who spent a year compiling a review into the Metropolitan Police, said: ‘This is worrying and speaks to a fundamental rupture in the bond of trust between the police and the public’

She said the police’s relationship with the public was at breaking point, adding: ‘Only with wholescale and radical reform can trust and confidence in the police be rebuilt.’

You May Also Like

DeSantis Claims Florida Could Handle Disasters Without Federal Aid

Is that a puzzled look on Kevin Guthrie’s face? The state emergency…

Mario Vargas Llosa the Great

The death of Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa (Arequipa, 1936 – Lima,…

Teen went to his high school class after stabbing father 45 times inside convenience store and staging the scene

Inset: Ahmed Al-Malahi (Allen County Sheriff). Background: One Stop Shop convenience store…

Lori Paige: Dad Possibly Sexually Abused 12-Year-Old Girl Before Killing Her

Florida police said a 12-year-old girl who was found dead last week…