Crime has fallen in the Lancaster district, official figures show

Crime has fallen over the last year in the Lancaster district, official police records reveal.
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Lancashire Constabulary recorded 11,082 offences in the Lancaster, Morecambe, Carnforth and Lune Valley areas in the 12 months to September, according to the Office for National Statistics.

That was a decrease of 21% compared to the previous year, when there were 14,009.

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At 76 crimes per 1,000 people, that was lower than the rate across England and Wales, which stood at 83.

Crime has fallen in the Lancaster district, official figures show.Crime has fallen in the Lancaster district, official figures show.
Crime has fallen in the Lancaster district, official figures show.

Crimes recorded in Lancaster included:

383 sexual offences, a decrease of 15%

4,358 violent offences, a decrease of 20%

1,606 incidents of criminal damage and arson, down 9%

Lancashire Constabulary recorded 11,082 offences in the Lancaster, Morecambe, Carnforth and Lune Valley areas in the 12 months to September.Lancashire Constabulary recorded 11,082 offences in the Lancaster, Morecambe, Carnforth and Lune Valley areas in the 12 months to September.
Lancashire Constabulary recorded 11,082 offences in the Lancaster, Morecambe, Carnforth and Lune Valley areas in the 12 months to September.

243 drug offences, up 9%

93 possession of weapons such as firearms or knives, up 18%

740 public order offences, down 25%

3,319 theft offences, down 28%

Overall, police recorded 6% fewer crimes across England and Wales – there were around 5.7 million offences in the year to September.

The ONS said this was driven by substantial falls in the three months to June, particularly in theft offences.

But separate figures from its Crime Survey for England and Wales show the estimated number of victims of crime in the three months to September were similar to levels seen in the run-up to the pandemic.

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Helen Ross, from the ONS Centre for Crime and Justice, said: “The coronavirus pandemic and related lockdown restrictions have resulted in fluctuations in the level of crime experienced in England and Wales.

“Data from the survey showed decreases in crime at the start of the pandemic, with rises seen over the summer months, specifically in theft, following the easing of lockdown measures, with overall crime now back at pre-lockdown levels of January to March 2020.

“There were also fluctuations in police recorded crime, but total recorded offences for July to September 2020 were below that seen in the same period in 2019.”

The ONS said an annual 3% drop in recorded knife crime across England and Wales was largely down to a 22% decrease in April to June.

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However, this was followed by a sharp increase in the three months to September.

Children’s charity Barnardo’s warned that offences could “erupt” once the latest lockdown is eased.

Chief executive Javed Khan said: “Children and young people have spent months out of school and away from their support networks, leaving many vulnerable to exploitation and control by criminal gangs who have seized on the disruption.

“With rising unemployment and poor job prospects, some young people are finding it hard to believe in a positive future, and see no alternative but to turn to a dangerous way of making money, carrying knives to protect themselves.”