
Border staff ‘need access to police data' to stop the small boats
Border Force officials do not have access to the police national database (PND) or facial recognition technology to screen migrants who arrive on small boats, according to a damning report by the policing inspectorate.
Frontline officers were found to be prioritising migrants' welfare and safeguarding checks when they arrived on UK shores instead of routinely interviewing them.
Despite cutting illegal migration to the UK being a priority for the government, inspectors found that intelligence gathering when migrants arrived in the UK was 'neither effective nor robust enough'.
HM Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services was commissioned to look at how effectively police forces and the National Crime Agency tackled organised immigration crime (OIC). Its report warned of missed opportunities to investigate OIC and
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
23 minutes ago
- Reuters
Former Arsenal forward jailed in UK on cannabis smuggling charge
LONDON, June 5 (Reuters) - Former Arsenal and Ipswich Town forward Jay Emmanuel-Thomas was on Thursday jailed for four years for orchestrating the smuggling of 60 kg of cannabis into Britain's Stansted Airport. The 34-year-old, who was released by Scottish second division club Greenock Morton after being charged last year, pleaded guilty at Chelmsford Crown Court last month. Britain's National Crime Agency previously said Emmanuel-Thomas had recruited his girlfriend and another woman to travel to Thailand, where Emmanuel-Thomas briefly played in 2019, to collect the cannabis and smuggle it to Britain. The two women were also charged with smuggling cannabis but the prosecution offered no evidence against them and the charges were dropped on Wednesday, the NCA added. Emmanuel-Thomas sat in the dock as Judge Alexander Mills told him: "Your transition from professional footballer to criminal represents a substantial fall from grace, one that effectively ends the only career path that you have ever known." He will serve 40% of that sentence in custody before he is released on licence. Prosecutor David Josse said the 60 kg of cannabis had a street value of approximately 600,000 pounds (roughly $816,000) and a wholesale value of around 250,000 pounds, though Emmanuel-Thomas was paid 5,000 pounds for his involvement. "This was an isolated incident (and) a catastrophic error of judgment," Emmanuel-Thomas' lawyer Alex Rose told the court.


BBC News
24 minutes ago
- BBC News
Rapist jailed for nine years for Shrewsbury attack
An "evil" man who raped a woman in a dark alleyway has been sentenced to nine years in Harvey, 25, of Clive Barracks in Tern Hill, Shropshire, had previously admitted carrying out the attack in the early hours of 6 July in the Mardol area of Shrewsbury.A statement from the victim, read out at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court, said she had suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and anxiety since the attack, and rarely went out with friends said she had been motivated to see the trial through to the end to prevent Harvey attacking anyone else, but as a result had been "forced to relive the worst moment of my life repeatedly". The court heard the incident, in which she was raped twice and sexually assaulted, had lasted about 20 Con Sam Jones said he had "committed a purely evil crime".In passing his sentence, Judge Richard McConaghy told Harvey: "You were drunk and had clearly been looking for sex."She was not interested in you, but you did not care."After the attack, the victim called the police, and the judge said the call had been "harrowing to listen to".Despite making full admissions to officers when he was arrested, Harvey chose to go to trial and contest the Con Jones said as a result of changing his story, he had subjected "his victim and her loved ones to sit through a trial and relive that awful night".The victim's statement, read by prosecutor Caroline Harris, said: "This man has no regard for women."He was found guilty in February by a jury following a nine-day sentencing hearing was not told what Harvey's job at the barracks had been, but the judge said he was "an educated man with a degree" and a "respectable career"."You had the capacity to make something of your life," the judge told sentenced Harvey to nine years for each of the charges of rape, to run concurrently, and seven years for the sexual assault, also to run judge said he must also serve three years on extended licence once his sentence was complete, be placed on the sex offenders register for life and must not contact victim directly or indirectly. Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
PETER HITCHENS: The police are revolting against the people of this country. They have failed to do their jobs and now they dare threaten us... the time has come for change
Our police chiefs have now quite obviously grown too big for their helmets. Their heads have got too swollen, while their feet, which they barely use any more, have gone soft from lack of contact with the pavement. The sheer nerve of their new threat to stop investigating some crimes if they don't like the size of their budget is an outrage. If Sir Keir Starmer wants to evoke a great cry of 'At last!' from the people of this country, he will very swiftly squash this disgraceful revolt against the public and Parliament by three of the most senior figures in the police hierarchy.