Back public against crime - Tory
Back public against crime - Tory
Mr Grieve says people should not feel they were powerless to intervene |
Adults should be able to challenge young people acting in an anti-social way without fear of prosecution, the shadow home secretary has said.
Dominic Grieve said people should not encouraged merely to report such minor grievances to police.
He said the Tories would re-write the rules to give officers more discretion when dealing with people who intervene.
He told the Independent people were being forced to "bleat" to police but said he was not promoting vigilantism.
At the moment, police across the UK advise people not to put themselves at risk if they come across young people acting in an anti-social way or committing a crime.
Mr Grieve also said police were wasting their time investigating trivial offences.
Empower citizens
While not defending people who used excessive force or vigilantism, Mr Grieve said he wanted to "stop people feeling that they could not intervene in their own neighbourhoods to prevent bad behaviour".
The public have come round to seeing the police as more likely to bite them than do something about the problems in the community Dominic Grieve |
"There is no doubt - the police say their discretion has been eroded," he told the paper.
"If somebody comes in to a police station and makes an allegation clearly of the most trivial character they nevertheless have to go through a process of dealing with it which may involve going round and confronting the person against whom the trivial allegation has been made."
He said people have become willing "to go running off to the police to bleat about the most minor matters" because they feel powerless to do anything themselves.
"... the public have come round to seeing the police as more likely to bite them than do something about the problems in the community around them."
Mr Grieve, a QC and shadow attorney general, added that if the police were allowed to show discretion, it would restore people's confidence in dealing with low-level crimes.
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