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More than 23,000 dogs stolen in UK in 10 years, figures show

More than 23,000 dogs stolen in UK in 10 years, figures show

Sky News12-03-2025

Pet owners are being urged to "be alert" after police figures showed more than 23,000 dogs have been stolen in the UK over the last 10 years.
Dog theft victim Sarah Rodgers told Sky News of the "devastating and particularly cruel crime" which left her family heartbroken after their husky was stolen last year.
An estimated 1,808 dogs were stolen across the UK in 2024, analysis of Freedom Of Information requests to police forces by Direct Line Pet Insurance also revealed.
Rottweilers saw the highest rise in thefts - a 180% year-on-year increase - followed by Border Collies and Chihuahuas.
Ms Rodgers explained the moment her dog vanished.
She told Sky News: "Diesel is our family husky. It was an ordinary evening in October last year and I let our dogs out to go into the garden for a wee.
"The other dogs came back. Diesel never returned from the garden and I haven't seen him since.
"The impact that it has, not only on the dogs but the families, the suffering that this causes. It's just devastating."
She said it was a "particularly cruel crime" and she had watched her daughter cope with the "heartbreak over her best friend being stolen".
Ms Rodgers added: "We went out into the woods, at the back of our home, and we found a camp which had been built by a person sleeping out with a fire pit.
"We firmly believe he was stolen by this person."
Beverley Cuddy, the editor of Dogs Today magazine, believes more can be done to tackle dog thefts.
She told Sky News: "It's seen as a low risk, high reward crime for these criminals. They are stealing dogs that are members of people's families - they're holding them to ransom in a lot of cases or they're monetising them to take them to be breeding slaves.
"It really is something that sadly the modern pet owner needs to be alert to.
"We also need something that makes it more difficult to monetise these dogs. Some way of taking the pound signs out of the equation."
1:05
Over the past 10 years, 23,430 dogs have been reported stolen to police, with 5,005 (21%) being returned.

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'He was going to kill me': More strangulation cases recorded by police but many investigations falter
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'He was going to kill me': More strangulation cases recorded by police but many investigations falter

Around 70% of non-fatal strangulation cases in the last year have been dropped due to evidential issues, exclusive data shared with Sky News shows. It is now three years since it became a standalone offence in England and Wales, in a landmark piece of legislation designed to protect domestic abuse victims. Data from the Institute for Addressing Strangulation (IFAS) shows that police are implementing the offence widely - but outcomes for victims are mixed. Warning: This article contains references to domestic abuse and sexual assault 'Sarah' - whose name has been changed to protect her identity - vividly remembers the first time her ex-partner strangled her, one year into their relationship. She said: "He was drunk, and he climbed on top me. He put his hands around my throat, and he pinned me down with the strength of his body." Terrified, she begged him repeatedly to stop, but he carried on. 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This was the outcome in three in five investigations overall, including one in five investigations where the victim did support police action. Outcomes were similar in both years of available data. "In around half of cases, there are no external, physical, visible signs of injury. That's not to say that there aren't internal injuries that can't be seen just with the naked eye," said Ms Smailes, who is a research officer at IFAS. "It might be that that visible injury isn't present at the time of evidence capture that might develop over time, or because there's a difference in how individuals show bruising, for example those of different skin tones. That can contribute towards there not being enough perceived evidence to be able to progress with a police case," she said. In some cases where a victim disengages from police proceedings, it may be that they did not feel supported and believed in the process or felt that there were "too many obstacles". 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Russia accuses UK of involvement in Ukraine drone strike that risks 'World War 3"

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Three Britons could face death penalty in Indonesia
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