Jump to content

Recommended Posts

In C4's series of programmes this week on knife and gun crime, the head of A&E at Kings said (I think) last night that last year 319 victims of knife and gun attacks were treated in King's A&E. That's around 6 a week. I'd imagine the bulk were knifings - the programme didn't give the breakdown.

For London you can get all the stats you want from the Met


Last year's summary data Apr 07 to Mar 08 is here


Or you can look at any particular month/year just here


Don't forget to balance the figures against weight of population - more accurate figures are crimes per head rather than totalrimes as it gives an idea of 'risk'. Mind you, for the EDF risk is pretty nnon-exisent for being suject to a violent crime in the locality.

Huguenot Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> For London you can get all the stats you want from

> the Met

>

> Last year's summary data Apr 07 to Mar 08 is here

>

> Or you can look at any particular month/year just

> here


The head of A&E at Kings said hospital figures for knife and gun victims were more reliable than any others (perhaps because everyone gets hosiptal treatment, but not everybody is counted in the police stats).


Also note that in the case of Southwark, victims in the orth of the borough would be treated most likely at other hospitals (Guys/St T's etc.)


An 'offensive weapon' could be anything: a machine gun, a knife, a brick, or even a blunt pole supporting a banner at a demo. Wthout a further breakdown of the police stats into actual weapons/implements I don't think we learn much.


>

> Don't forget to balance the figures against weight

> of population - more accurate


Um, I think you'll find both types of data are equally 'accurate'. It's just that one set is absoluate and the other relative.


figures are crimes

> per head rather than totalrimes as it gives an

> idea of 'risk'. Mind you, for the EDF risk is

> pretty nnon-exisent for being suject to a violent

> crime in the locality.


Yes, 'in the locality'. Most people don't actually spend 24/7 on the streets 'in the locality' though. I'm much more likely to be in the street somewhere like Camberwell or Peckham or Elephant (such as travelling late at night) than I am in ED: when I'm in ED I'm usually in my house.

Louisiana are you Fisking me?


Not sure why, I wasn't saying the figures were good or bad - merely pointing out where you could find them ;-)


I agree with you totally of course, some injuries won't be reported to the police, and if you travel in high risk areas at high risk times then of course you are under high risk :-S


However, I do think we should keep things in perspective and comparative numbers often help. I don't believe in scaring people. Our victims of violence are only a fraction of those in other developed countries, and whilst it doesn't make any crime good, it does help us to build from a positive foundation rather than fear.

Is it just me or does anyone else think that the tabloids are trying to scare everyone about knife crime because they're fed up with Gordon Brown and are hoping the electorate will lurch a bit to the right in response to their fears?


I have a sneaking suspicion that in a few weeks we'll be back onto binge drinking or dangerous dogs or whtever else is the flavour of the month, irrespective of the statistics.

Yes and No James - I do think that you have massive point as it seems like the media are enjoying whipping up social problems at the moment, however, I cannot remember there ever being so many killings locally, and certainly I have never felt as uneasy on the streets round here.

Hope not.....


  Quote
Drink blamed for an outbreak of violence




? Previous ? PreviousNext ? Next ?View GalleryPublished Date: 01 October 2007

By Victoria Taylor

Crime reporter

Police chiefs today hit out at binge drinkers after a spate of alcohol-fuelled violence in Portsmouth.


And police say it was women who were to blame for many of the drunken incidents at the weekend.


Inspector Jon Snook, from Portsmouth Central Police Station, said: 'It's disappointing that stupid people go out drinking to excess and clearly come ouADVERTISEMENTt of venues having drunk far too much and problems occur outside.'


His comments come as police continue with Operation Drink Safe ? the News-backed drive to cut alchol-fuelled crime.


Drunken incidents dealt with by police at the weekend included:


A 22-year-old man covered in blood who was assaulted in Guildhall Walk at 2.35am on Saturday.


Two 32-year-old men handed ?80 fines after being arrested for public order offences outside Yates's Wine Lodge shortly after 7pm on Saturday.


A 23-year-old woman from Kingston, Portsmouth, suffered an inch long cut on her forehead after being hit with a bottle at Club 8 in Guildhall Walk.


A 20-year-old woman, from Fareham, and a 21-year-old woman, from Gosport, were arrested on suspicion of assault but both released without further action after the incident at 11.30pm on Saturday.


A door steward was assaulted at Jongleurs in Gunwharf after a woman was asked to leave the nightclub at 11.40am on Saturday.


A 24-year-old woman, from Southsea, was arrested on suspicion of assault and released on bail until next month.


A 24-year-old man called police to say he was assaulted inside Liquid Envy nightclub in Stanhope Road, Portsmouth, in the early hours of Sunday.


Outside the club a 20-year-old woman from Havant was grabbed by the throat and thrown to the ground by a man at 1am on Sunday. She refused to press charges.


A 24-year-old man, from Havant, was spotted by police shouting foul and abusive language in Guildhall Walk at 2.45am on Sunday.


He was later handed an ?80 on-the-spot fine.

To paraphrase Keeler, "well he WOULD say that wouldn't he"


And to quote someone else from the forum earlier - the admissions at hospitals are more reliable than the police figures as crimes may be unreported but serious wounds tend to get treated

  • 2 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Where did I say he did a good job? Yup and Corbyn was very close to Len McCluskey and funded by Unite wasn't he...they're all as bad as each other... Labour have to purge their party of the far-left - they're a disaster. Allan Johnson summed it up so well on election night in 2019....  
    • Thank you for the detailed advise @trinidad It is definitely damage we are concerned about. I don’t think Evri would agree to pay the bill to fix our gate or letter box if they were to be damaged as a result of their delivery drivers helper. Our doorbell can be heard from outside when rung so we don’t quite believe the aggressive simultaneous door/letter box banging is necessary. It can be quite a shock it is done very aggressively.  I’ll definitely action the steps you’ve kindly provided along with a phone call tomorrow. I do sympathise with the role drivers have and how busy they are, which is why we tried communicating directly with her but sadly we haven’t succeeded 
    • What outcome would you like? Disciplinary action? Not to have the driver back? Retraining? I know there is alot of pressure on drivers to deliver within a set day. if he slams the gate, is it evidence he is causing damage, or is the noise a irritant to yourself? You could put a sign up or buy a signing asking to close the gate gentle???? can you hear the door bell from the door? he might be ringing, not hearing and therefore knocking. In trhe notes section of the be livery page, there is a note section, although there is not 100 per cent these notes would be read as these drivers are constantly rushing.  I did a google search for you, i found this and you can try the envri website Contact Us | Evri   To complain to Evri, you can follow these steps: Contact Customer Service: Call Evri's customer service at 0330 808 5456 for assistance with your complaint.    1 Write a Letter: Address your complaint to Capitol House, 1 Capitol Close, Morley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS27 0WH.    1 Use the Official Website: Visit the Evri complaints page on their official website for detailed instructions on how to submit a complaint.    2 Email or Call for Specific Issues: For issues like missing or damaged parcels, you can email or call 0800 988 8888, which is free to call.    1 These methods will help you effectively communicate your concerns to Evri.   My driver is called anthony, he is brilliant to be honest. I cant fault him.
    • When I have more time and energy, I will look up the actual number of votes cast for each party in that election, rather than the number of seats won. I'm interested to see that you apparently  think that  Boris Johnson did a good job of "leading the country through Covid." Is your memory really that short? I won't stoop to calling Johnson and his cronies names in the way that you seem to think is appropriate for left wing politicians. At least the left wing politicians have some semblance of morals and a concern for people who aren't in some over privileged inner circle and/or raking in money for themselves on the back of an epidemic. I'm not going to open a can of worms on here  by commenting on the disgraceful so called "purge". 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...