Conservative politicians are calling for search operations to be boosted—but London's spiking murder rate may require a much more nuanced approach.
Britain is in the grips of the worst explosion of knife violence for generations, with London's murder rate last year briefly surpassing that of New York.
New York City’s falling murder rate, which peaked at 2,245 murders at the turn of the 1990s, is a source of great pride for the city. Politicians and law enforcement officials introduced a wide range of measures to address the violence, and continued to do so while it was falling. The following year, the U.S. District Court ruled that officers had used stop-and-frisk searches unconstitutionally and ordered an overhaul of their application. This set off a series of appeals, but nonetheless, stop-and-frisk use declined dramatically.
Writing for The Daily Mail, Johnson suggested the knife crime problem stemmed from offenders being unafraid to carry weapons. He recalled his term as London mayor, when he oversaw “a massive program of stop and search” to battle knife crime. Johnson claimed that some critics “suggested that stop and search was discriminatory and heavy-handed. We ignored these voices. It worked.”
“It is no coincidence that the demanded reduction in doing stop-and-search…preceded a noticeable increase in the rise in knife crime,” Wettone added. However, he stressed that such powers are “just one part” of the fight against knife crime.
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