logo
New map shows UK streets hit hardest by 'Kamikaze' shoplifting

New map shows UK streets hit hardest by 'Kamikaze' shoplifting

Daily Mirror21-06-2025
As 'Kamikaze' shoplifting sweeps Britain, a new crime map has revealed the high streets most plagued by the retail theft 'epidemic' - use our interactive map to see how it compares where you live
A new map has revealed the UK high streets hit hardest by a wave of 'Kamikaze' shoplifting - as brazen thieves snatch goods in plain sight with little fear of consequences.
More than 500,000 shoplifting offences were recorded by police in England and Wales in 2024 - a 20% surge on the previous year, and the highest since records began more than 20 years ago. Over half (56%) of retail workers say they've witnessed so-called Kamikaze shoplifting - blatant, in-your-face theft - in their workplace, according to research by SafetyCulture.

One in eight (13%) say it happens daily, and over a third (37%) see it weekly. The British Independent Retail Association (Bira) calls it a 'tipping point', warning some offenders now believe they can 'walk into a shop, take what they want in full view of staff and customers, and walk out knowing there will be no consequences.'

Adding to the trend, security firms report a 'massive increase' in pensioners shoplifting - driven by cost-of-living pressures. 'For us over the last 12 months, we've got this different level of crime now. We're now experiencing something different - pensioners, people who don't normally shoplift,' said John Nussbaum of Kingdom Service Group.
The crime map reveals Leeds City Centre as the worst-hit area, with 3,004 shoplifting offences in 2024 - that's one every three hours. Fitzrovia West & Soho in Westminster followed with 2,430, and Brighton's North Laine & the Lanes came third with 2,116.
Also ranking high on the list is Cathays South & Bute Park in Cardiff (1,753), the City of London (1,687), Central Birmingham (1,407), Newcastle City Centre (1,240), Liverpool's Central & Islington district (1,240), and Stone & Crossways in Dartford (1,229).
Crime figures are available for every one of more than 7,000 neighbourhoods in England and Wales, except areas covered by Greater Manchester Police, as the force has not supplied crime data for the last year. The figures cover neighbourhoods with between 7,000 and 10,000 residents, which the government designates as Middle Super Output Areas (MSOAs). The statistics do not include crimes reported at train stations, as British Transport Police record them.
You can see how retail theft compares near you using our interactive map.

The news comes after a former shoplifter who once stole £3 million worth of goods says Brits now have 'a licence to steal' as shoplifting hits record highs. Cullan Mals, 32, used to steal up to £2,000 a day - as much as £14,000 a week - before turning his life around. He says soft sentences made it easy: 'People now have a licence to steal and it's getting even worse with the cost-of-living crisis.'
Now a podcaster working with a drug recovery charity in Cardiff, he believes tougher penalties are the only solution: 'People now have total licence to steal. I think personally, if it's on an organised level, the sentences need to be harsher because at the end of the day these people know penalties are weak. When you go to an off licence, everything is behind Perspex - it's a bit dystopian but it works. Big supermarkets should lock up all meat, booze, aftershave, and then just have a guy there whose job it is to unlock the goods for shoppers.'

His comments come as repeat offender Martyn Boyns was arrested and charged with nine counts of shop theft and one of fraud in Penzance and Newlyn. The £1,200 haul included nappies, perfume, meat, and booze. Penzance Police, who announced the arrest on Facebook, said officers had been 'working tirelessly' to gather evidence. Boyns has now been banned from several shops and four streets in the town.
Another former shoplifter, Keeley Knowles - once known as 'Birmingham's most prolific' - stole thousands of pounds' worth of goods to fund her heroin addiction. After 28 prison stints, she's now 18 months clean and working to inspire recovery. She credits her turnaround to West Midlands Police 's Offending to Recovery programme, which began in Erdington in 2018 and is now expanding to Coventry, Dudley, Walsall, and Wolverhampton. The scheme was developed after research showed 70% of shop theft was linked to heroin and crack addiction.

Meanwhile in Edinburgh, shopkeeper Majid Mohamed says his mobile phone accessories and repair shop is regularly targeted - especially during peak tourist seasons.
'It depends on the time of year really how bad shoplifting is, it's particularly bad at Christmas and New Year and of course The Fringe, the busy times for the city,' he said. 'We have CCTV but when they are in groups they provide cover for each other. Sometimes items are stolen without us even noticing until too late. And even though we have the cameras the thieves don't seem to care, it's a 'what are you going to do' kind of attitude, pretty intimidating.'
Jeff Moody, Bira's Chief Commercial Officer, said: 'The fact that shoplifting has reached this unprecedented level is frankly alarming, but it's the brazen nature of these crimes that's particularly concerning. What's particularly troubling is that half of our members are now choosing not to report thefts because they've lost faith in getting any meaningful response.
'The harm to retailers goes far beyond the immediate financial loss. Independent businesses operate on wafer-thin margins, and every theft chips away at their ability to invest, grow, and employ people. We need urgent action from police forces to treat retail crime with the seriousness it deserves, and for the courts to send a clear message that this behaviour won't be tolerated.'
Shoplifting was first described as an 'epidemic' in 2023 by Dame Sharon White, the chair of John Lewis Partnership, and since then, crime - and the cost to retailers - has spiralled. The British Retail Consortium (BRC) said retailers footed an 'eye-watering' £4.2 billion bill from crime last year, including £2.2bn lost to shoplifting, and £1.8bn spent on crime prevention measures.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ghislaine Maxwell 'quizzed in jail' about high-profile Brits' links to Epstein
Ghislaine Maxwell 'quizzed in jail' about high-profile Brits' links to Epstein

Daily Mirror

time9 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Ghislaine Maxwell 'quizzed in jail' about high-profile Brits' links to Epstein

US lawyers have been quizzing Ghislaine Maxwell about other Brits' relationships with Jeffrey Epstein. She was convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein sexually abuse underage girls Ghislaine Maxwell has been quizzed about other Brits' relationships with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. US government lawyers interviewed her about more than 100 people connected to her ex-boyfriend. ‌ As well as Prince Andrew, they include three other Brits linked to Epstein's inner circle. One is described as a 'high-profile public figure' whose long-standing friendship with the New York financier raised concern even before his 2019 jailhouse suicide. ‌ The other two are known to have spent significant time at Epstein's various homes, including his private island in the Caribbean, his Manhattan townhouse and his New Mexico ranch. Maxwell – serving 20 years in a US jail for helping Epstein abuse young girls – discussed the names during interviews with the Deputy US Attorney General, Todd Blanche. ‌ Prison They focused on UK associates of Epstein and British socialite Maxwell during the 1990s and early 2000s. 'There was more than just Prince Andrew known to Epstein,' said a source. 'Blanche asked detailed, forensic questions about three other British nationals. ‌ 'He was very specific about dates, locations and their relationship to Epstein. It was clear the Department of Justice is now pulling on threads that go far beyond just the Duke where Brits are concerned.' The interviews took place two weeks ago in Tallahassee, near the Florida prison where Maxwell was held. Since then, she has been moved to a cushier jail in Bryan, Texas. ‌ Two of the Brits are understood to have flown on Epstein's private jet, the Lolita Express, several times. The third was present at multiple dinners hosted by Epstein in New York and Palm Beach. 'The DoJ has questions about why these individuals were in Epstein's orbit, what they witnessed, and what they may have known,' the insider said. 'Blanche was clearly well briefed and Maxwell knows she's not the last Brit they'll be speaking to.' ‌ The interviews come amid a growing storm over President Donald Trump 's friendship with Epstein and Maxwell. Backlash Trump had vowed to release all the files relating to the paedophile if he won re-election but has now reneged on his U-turn has sparked a backlash among even his fanatical supporters. ‌ US lawmakers have signalled their support for public hearings into how Epstein operated with apparent impunity for decades – and how he secured sweetheart deals from prosecutors. Sources say Blanche's involvement in the Epstein case shows that Trump is braced for further fallout. Blanche won the second most powerful US legal post after fighting Trump's criminal cases last year. Meanwhile, Ghislaine – daughter of fraudster tycoon Robert Maxwell – is seeking a presidential pardon and to have her 2022 conviction overturned. ‌ 'There's a belief she's holding out for a pardon or some kind of deal to commute her sentence if she co-operates,' said another source. 'But the Americans want more than vague recollections, they want names, locations, and documents.' A contacts book of Epstein's found by investigators lists more than 300 individuals from the UK. Maxwell's name, alongside Andrew's, appears repeatedly in flight logs, calendars and photographs held by the FBI. Victims of Epstein – who hanged himself in jail aged 66 while awaiting trial – and Maxwell, 63, have spoken out against any leniency for her. Last week, the family of Virginia Giuffre branded Maxwell a 'monster who deserves to rot in prison for the rest of her life'. ‌ Their statement went on: 'She destroyed the lives of girls and young women without conscience. Virginia always said Maxwell was vicious and could often be more cruel than Epstein.' Virginia killed herself in April, aged 41, three years after winning an out-of-court settlement from Prince Andrew. ‌ In 2001 the Duke posed with Virginia, then 17, and Maxwell in one of the most viewed royal photos ever, which was said to have been taken by Epstein at Maxwell's London home. Virginia's family also attacked Trump after he claimed Epstein 'stole' her from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida when she was 16. Her dad, Sky Roberts, said: 'It makes us ask if he (Trump) was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions.' ‌ Trump made the remarks during an impromptu press conference aboard Air Force One last week, where he claimed Epstein had poached his staff. He named Virginia, who had worked at the resort spa as a locker room attendant as a teenager. 'Everyone knows the people that were taken,' Trump said. 'People were taken out of the spa hired by him. I didn't know that. And then when I heard about it, I told him, 'Listen, we don't want you taking our people'…And he was fine. And then not too long after that, he did it again. And I said, 'Out of here'.' ‌ Prior to their fallout, both the paedophile and Maxwell had been regulars at Trump's Palm Beach club, often photographed alongside him and his then-girlfriend Melania. Virginia's family said the president's comments raised 'disturbing questions', not least because Trump had once publicly joked that Epstein 'likes women on the younger side… no doubt about it.' They said: 'We and the public are asking for answers.' ‌ Virginia had long claimed she was recruited into the sex ring in 2000, after Maxwell approached her at Mar-a-Lago. She was just 16 at the time. Virginia would go on to accuse Andrew of having sex with her three times at the behest of Epstein, a claim the Duke of York vehemently denies. Her family added: 'We would like to clarify that our sister was preyed upon by Maxwell during her time working for Trump. This was in 2000, four years before Trump and Epstein reportedly fell out.' While it remains unclear whether the three Britons will be named, Epstein's victims have welcomed the expanded scope of the inquiry. One said: 'There is a groundswell of support that the truth comes out.'

Inside hellhole jail where British Angel Delight drug smugglers face terrifying 'threats'
Inside hellhole jail where British Angel Delight drug smugglers face terrifying 'threats'

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Inside hellhole jail where British Angel Delight drug smugglers face terrifying 'threats'

Three British drug smugglers have been spared the death penalty in Indonesia, but experts reveal that the conditions they will face whilst serving their sentences will be hard to endure Three British drug mules have been sentenced to one year in prison after being caught smuggling over 900 grams of cocaine into Indonesia. ‌ At first, it was feared that all three could face the death penalty after coming afoul of the country's strict anti-drug laws. However, Lisa Stocker, 39, her partner, Jon Collyer, 39, and accomplice Phineas Float, 31, were spared this fate - and could be back in the UK relatively soon after finishing their prison sentences. ‌ The trio were arrested on February 1 at Bali's international airport, after a routine search found 17 packets of Angel Delight in their luggage, in which £300,000 of cocaine was hidden. It comes after a woman, 20, was found dead on bus with 26 iPhones glued to her body. ‌ Collyer had 10 of the packets in his suitcase, and Stocker had seven, and their accomplice, Float, was due to receive the 922g of the Class A drug a few days later. All three pleaded guilty to the smuggling charges and were sentenced to one year in prison. Because of time served, they should be home by January 2026 - but the conditions they will have to endure in the meantime will likely take a "heavy psychological toll", experts have warned. All three of the drug smugglers are expected to serve their sentences in Kerkoban prison - a facility notorious for its overcrowded conditions, gang deaths, and riots. ‌ Criminologist and psychologist Alex Iszatt explains to the Mirror: "Unlike many foreign drug offenders in Indonesia who face long sentences or even the death penalty, this case is unusual for the relatively light sentencing. The court pointed to their remorse and polite behaviour as mitigating factors. But that doesn't make their time behind bars any easier. "Jonathan Collyer, Lisa Stocker, and Phineas Float have avoided execution, yes, but their one-year prison sentences will still be brutal – marked by harsh conditions, isolation, and a heavy psychological toll, even for such a short term. "Indonesian prisons, especially Bali's notorious Kerobokan facility, are overcrowded, under-resourced, and riddled with corruption." ‌ Adam Jones, Legal Expert at HD Claims, echoes these sentiments, explaining that despite the short length of their sentences, it will still be an incredibly challenging period for the three Brits. "While the couple have avoided the death penalty – which is still a legal punishment for drug trafficking in Bali – their sentence will still be extremely tough by UK standards," Adam says, adding, "Prison conditions in Bali are known to be strict and, in some cases, harsh – with overcrowding, limited access to healthcare, and hard labour not uncommon. Communication with family members is possible, but often restricted and subject to state approval, making regular contact a challenge." ‌ Inaccessible healthcare will present problems for Stocker, who is said to suffer from some health problems. "Health concerns add another layer of difficulty. Lisa reportedly has pre-existing skin cancer, and Indonesia's prisons have very limited healthcare facilities. These prisons are also hotspots for diseases like tuberculosis and dengue fever, while chronic illnesses often go untreated," says Alex. Both experts felt that being foreign nationals in the notorious jail will bring extra challenges for Stocker, Collyer, and Float. ‌ "Foreign prisoners may also face added scrutiny or stigma and often struggle to understand or access legal or procedural support compared to local inmates," Adam explains. Alex noted, "As foreigners convicted of drug offences, they occupy a precarious position inside prison. Locals may resent them, seeing them as targets, but their British nationality could also buy some protection – if they have the funds to bribe guards or gangs. "Physical violence might be less common because of their short sentences, but extortion, intimidation, and psychological pressure remain very real risks." ‌ There is a chance that the three Brits could "fare slightly better" Alex explains, but the expert pointed out that Indonesian prisons are a world away from what people from the UK might expect to find. "Foreign inmates sometimes fare slightly better, but basic necessities – clean water, medical care, even a decent place to sleep – are often in short supply. These prisons are nothing like what Brits expect. Prisoners rely heavily on money sent from family to buy essentials like food and medicine. Without that support, they're vulnerable to the system's harsh realities." ‌ Stocker and Collyer - a couple - are not likely to be together during their sentences - or have much contact, the experts explain, which could add to the psychological pressure they are under during their time in prison. "Lisa will be held separately in the women's section, while Jonathan and Phineas will be in the men's. Conjugal visits are almost unheard of in Indonesia, meaning Jonathan and Lisa may not see each other throughout their sentence," explains Alex. "Foreign nationals in Indonesian prisons are typically separated by gender, so it's very likely the pair will be placed in different facilities, with little to no direct contact. That, combined with language barriers and unfamiliar cultural expectations, can create a highly isolating experience," Adam said. ‌ There is no doubt in Adam's mind that it will be an "extremely tough" sentence for the three Brits, with the expert pointing out, "Their mental and physical resilience will be tested throughout their sentence." Alex agreed, explaining, "The mental strain is severe. After the terror of facing the death penalty, the shock of incarceration, even for a year, can cause intense anxiety and depression. Language barriers and social isolation only make it worse. "While their sentence is lenient by Indonesian standards – where drug traffickers often face decades behind bars or execution – the reality is that a year in Kerobokan will feel much longer. The one silver lining is that their sentence will be reduced by the time they've already spent in detention since February 2025, meaning they could be out by early 2026."

Two ‘professional' robbers targeting tourists in Marbella are arrested after posing as holidaymakers to burgle Brits
Two ‘professional' robbers targeting tourists in Marbella are arrested after posing as holidaymakers to burgle Brits

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Two ‘professional' robbers targeting tourists in Marbella are arrested after posing as holidaymakers to burgle Brits

RAIDERS SNARED Two 'professional' robbers targeting tourists in Marbella are arrested after posing as holidaymakers to burgle Brits Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) TWO alleged members of a "professional" robbery gang have been arrested in Marbella after raiding at least nine tourist flats. The pair nicked items worth over £550,000 while tourists were outside their homes, Spain's National Police said. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The two members of a 'professional' robbery gang arrested in Marbella Credit: 2 A picturesque narrow street with blue flower pots on the walls of houses in old town Credit: Getty The force said the men disguised themselves as tourists to "blend in with their surroundings" and avoid raising suspicions while breaking into rentals. During other burglaries, they were spotted wearing masks and caps to avoid being identified on security cameras. The pair are accused of carrying out at least nine night-time robberies in the popular southern Spanish city, police said. The force added their haul could be worth over £550,000. Read more world news HOLS TRAGEDY Heartbreaking words of 6yo after siblings drowned on 'last swim' of Spain hols Their loot includes jewellery, luxury watches, electronic devices and cash. They allegedly used a well-known technique to open doors, which involves inserting a sheet of flexible plastic between the frame and the lock's hatch. During the investigation, local police revealed that the suspects targeted tourist blocks. They would reportedly wait for tourists to leave the properties before breaking in. Investigators said they may have used more sophisticated methods, such as "bumping" or "impressioning" - as some victims said they locked the door and found no signs of forced entry upon their return. They scoped out the properties, police said, to determine when tenants or tourists were least likely to be inside. Fans go wild as England beat Spain on penalties to win Women's Euro 2025 final Once inside the homes, the thieves took precautions to avoid leaving fingerprints or traces, police added. The two suspects have been remanded in custody, and further investigations are underway.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store