- Lancashire Constabulary receives an extra £710,500 to tackle serious violent crime, including knife crime and murder.
- This investment is part of the £130.5 million funding package announced to tackle serious violent crime across England and Wales.
- The funding package will help to prevent some of the most serious types of crime and deliver safer communities for the British public.
Antony Higginbotham MP has welcomed the announcement that the Conservative Government is making available over £130 million to tackle serious violent crime – including murder and knife crime – in the coming year.
Lancashire Constabulary will receive £710,500 of part of this extra funding, as one of the 18 areas across England and Wales selected for targeted police action.
The total £130.5 million funding package includes £30 million to support the police to take targeted action in parts of England and Wales most affected by serious violence, as well as up to £23 million for a new early intervention programme that will help stop young people from being drawn into the cycle of violence.
In addition to this funding, today’s announcement also provides: £10 million to expand domestic abuse perpetrator programmes – working with offenders to help them change and prevent abuse happening in the first place, over £3 million to expand investigations into gang related material on social media, £1.6 million towards piloting the Creating Opportunities Forum which helps provide access to employment opportunities for young people at risk of serious violence, and £1 million to set up and pilot new homicide reviews – helping to prevent future deaths.
The funding package comes ahead of the introduction of a major criminal justice Bill, which will give police new stop and search powers to tackle known knife and weapons carriers, place a duty on public sector bodies – including police, education and health agencies – to take a joined-up approach to addressing serious violence, and require local agencies to review the circumstances when a homicide takes place involving offensive weapons, such as knives.
This funding builds on the unprecedented work that this government is doing to tackle serious violence in our communities. With £105 million already invested in Violence Reduction Units – supporting over 100,000 young people, increasing police recruitment and our work to get dangerous weapons off the streets via Serious Violence Reduction Orders, we are delivering on our promise to keep the public safe by making our communities safer for the British public.
Commenting, local MP Antony Higginbotham said:
We need to tackle violent criminals head on, giving the police the powers and resources they need to take them to task. And today’s announcement of extra funding will ensure just that, giving our police all of the tools they need to crack down on violent crime whilst also addressing its underlying causes.
Violent crime devastates families and communities and we need to come down hard on it; rooting it out wherever it happens. That’s what I promised when I said I’d back the police and that's what this money will help us to do.
Commenting, Home Secretary Priti Patel said:
I am determined to cut crime and make our streets safer, which is why we are recruiting 20,000 more police officers, introducing new stop and search powers and giving the police the resources they need to go after the serious violent criminals causing misery in communities.
But when it comes to gangs and serious violence, we must also tackle underlying causes. That is why we are investing in a new early intervention programme to stop young people committing these crimes in the first place.