Explore The NRA Universe Of Websites

APPEARS IN News

Policing in the U.K. – Burglaries and Bain-Maries

Monday, March 11, 2024

Policing in the U.K. – Burglaries and Bain-Maries

We have written before about police “operations” termed “weapons sweeps” in the United Kingdom, in which law enforcement resources are used to scour public spaces to ferret out would-be implements of “knife-enabled crime.” Often displayed among the recovered “weapons taken off the streets” are what appear to be oddments scavenged from metal recycling bins and similar cast-off junk – pliers, a file, old kitchen flatware, and even a bicycle wheel.

A report on one such operation (Derbyshire Constabulary, Engagement and sweeps conducted during national knife crime week of action, Nov. 19, 2022) explains, “[t]his is all about being proactive and ensuring anything potentially dangerous doesn’t get into the wrong hands in the first place… Anything we find, whether it’s a weapon or whether it’s something seemingly innocuous which has the potential to be dangerous, we will take away anyway so nobody else gets hold of it.” Officers “also look out for any disused waste, such as cans, which might highlight antisocial behaviour to us and we can then work with partner agencies to clear this out and help keep the park a safe and nice place to visit.”

Being proactive and keeping public areas tidy are laudable, to be sure, but it is somewhat startling to read that while officers spend working hours combing the undergrowth for signs of antisocial behavior, police have failed to solve a single burglary in almost half of neighborhoods in England and Wales. “An analysis of police data from 30,100 neighbourhoods found that in 48.2 per cent, no break-ins had been solved in the past three years. The data includes the time since England and Wales’s 43 chief constables pledged in October 2022 that their officers would visit the scene of every burglary.” The percentage of burglaries that resulted in criminal charges has dropped from 4.6 in 2022 to 3.9 in 2023. The worst hit of these neighborhoods is Outer Rothwell in West Yorkshire, where reportedly all of the burglaries in 2021-23 remain unsolved.

Dame Vera Baird KC, a former Victims’ Commissioner (an appointed government position dedicated to promoting the interests of victims and witnesses), commented that “burgling somebody’s home is a free hit. The criminal can walk away with the proceeds and never look back… Why are there no arrests, no prosecutions and no deterrence in almost half of all these cases?”

What makes these crimes all the more distressing for householders is that break-ins in the U.K. tend to be “hot burglaries,” where a resident is home when the crime is committed. A 2023 burglary report on England and Wales using Freedom of Information Act requests to the Home Office determined that the most common time for burglars to strike was between 6 pm and midnight.

Dr. John Lott of the Crime Prevention Research Center points out that the “United Kingdom not only has twice the burglary rate of the United States, but 59% of break-ins there are hot burglaries. By contrast, the U.S. has a hot burglary rate of 13%.” Further, “surveys of convicted burglars in the two countries indicate that American criminals spend about twice as much time casing a home and making sure no one is home. American burglars frequently comment that they avoid late-night break-ins because ‘that’s the way to get shot.’ These are concerns that British burglars don’t share, given the UK’s strict gun laws.”

These are, in fact, concerns that British criminals as a class don’t have to lose sleep over, knowing that the law-abiding are generally prohibited from possessing any sort of “offensive weapon” for defensive use (“items that are made for the purpose of causing injury and have no other practical purpose,” but including, also, items adapted or altered for the purpose of causing injury and those that are not specifically made or adapted to cause injury but are carried for that purpose, like “a hammer, cricket ball, baseball bat, scissors, razor, a stone, pick axe handle etc.”) An official police resource called “Ask the Police” is clear: “[i]t is an offence for any person who without lawful authority or reasonable excuse has with them in any public place, any offensive weapon. It is also an offence to possess (including in private) any offensive weapon as outlined in category 1, i.e. those that are made for the purpose of causing injury” (emphasis added).

In response to the question, Are there any legal self-defense products I can buy?, the same website states that the “only fully legal self-defence product at the moment is a rape alarm … You must not get a product that is made or adapted to cause a person injury. Possession of such a product in public (and in private in specific circumstances) is against the law” (emphasis in the original).

The British, of course, are at liberty to decide on what is acceptable behavior in their own society. However, the prohibition on possessing so much as a stone to defend oneself to ensure that “anything potentially dangerous doesn’t get into the wrong hands” comes with a significant social cost for the law-abiding. In 2019, Londoners attempting to subdue a convicted terrorist on a murderous rampage had to scramble for anything – anything – that might serve as a weapon. “I was thinking of using the lid of a bain-marie as a shield and maybe a serving spoon or something,” testified one brave bystander on arming himself, and who instead “took a narwhal tusk from a bracket and used it to keep [the terrorist] at a distance as other attendees fought the terrorist using makeshift weapons including a pike and fire extinguisher.”

TRENDING NOW
Guide To The Interstate Transportation Of Firearms

Gun Laws  

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Guide To The Interstate Transportation Of Firearms

CAUTION: Federal and state firearms laws are subject to frequent change. This summary is not to be considered as legal advice or a restatement of law.

Michigan: Anti-Gun Legislation Passed in the Middle of the Night Heads To Governor’s Desk

Friday, December 20, 2024

Michigan: Anti-Gun Legislation Passed in the Middle of the Night Heads To Governor’s Desk

With the sun setting on the 2023-2024 legislative session, yesterday the Michigan Senate held a marathon session lasting over 24 hours. While citizens were sleeping, anti-gun lawmakers were able to pass two pieces of legislation, ...

Here We Go Again: Anti-gun States Simultaneously Sue Law-Abiding Gunmaker

News  

Friday, December 13, 2024

Here We Go Again: Anti-gun States Simultaneously Sue Law-Abiding Gunmaker

Last week, the anti-gun attorneys general of Minnesota and New Jersey filed nearly simultaneous lawsuits against firearm maker Glock, essentially claiming the company was violating the laws of those states by making guns that are too easy to illegally ...

Concealed Carry Permit, Gun Sale Numbers Stay Strong in 2024

News  

Monday, December 16, 2024

Concealed Carry Permit, Gun Sale Numbers Stay Strong in 2024

The Crime Prevention Research Center (CPRC) has released the latest in its series of annual reports on trends in concealed carry permits in America.

Michigan: Final Push to Limit Gun Rights as Session Clock Runs Down

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Michigan: Final Push to Limit Gun Rights as Session Clock Runs Down

With only a few days left in the session, anti-gun legislators are doing everything they can to pass additional legislation restricting the Second Amendment rights of Michigan citizens. The legislation below could be taken up ...

Gun Control Activists Cite “Loopholes” in CEO’s Murder, Ignore Facts and Law

News  

Monday, December 16, 2024

Gun Control Activists Cite “Loopholes” in CEO’s Murder, Ignore Facts and Law

Predictably, gun control activists are citing the cold-blooded Manhattan murder of health insurance executive Brian Thompson to call for more gun control, particularly in the hot-button areas of “ghost guns” and “3D printed firearms.” 

Maine: Prepare for Progressives to Attack Your Hunting Rights

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Maine: Prepare for Progressives to Attack Your Hunting Rights

While 2024 may be winding down now, the 2025 legislative session is about to heat up, and radical anti-gun progressive politicians are already planning new ways to strip you of your fundamental rights.  

NYC Subway More Dangerous Than the Gridiron?

News  

Monday, December 16, 2024

NYC Subway More Dangerous Than the Gridiron?

Violent crime in New York City has been a growing concern over the last few years.  

Canada Announces New Gun Bans, More Gun Control on the Horizon

News  

Monday, December 9, 2024

Canada Announces New Gun Bans, More Gun Control on the Horizon

On December 5, at a late afternoon press conference in Ottawa, Canada’s federal Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc announced that 324 additional makes and variants of rifles would be added to the 2020 list of ...

Michigan: Take Action Against Anti-Gun Legislation TODAY!

Friday, December 13, 2024

Michigan: Take Action Against Anti-Gun Legislation TODAY!

With lame duck session in full swing, Michigan Democrats are doing everything they can to pass additional anti-gun legislation. Last night, the Senate passed, among other things, legislation that would restrict home-built firearms and ban ...

MORE TRENDING +
LESS TRENDING -

More Like This From Around The NRA

NRA ILA

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the "lobbying" arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.