
Shopkeeper sprayed with 'substance' during Glasgow robbery
The shopkeeper was taken to Glasgow Royal Infirmary for treatment.Det Sgt Turnbull said it had been an "extremely frightening experience".He urged anyone who knows the identity of the suspect or has private CCTV footage of the area to share it with officers.
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The Independent
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Telegraph
4 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Record numbers of Britain's worst shoplifting offenders are avoiding jail
More chronic shoplifters and thieves are walking free than ever before, analysis by The Telegraph has revealed. Nearly six in 10 prolific thieves – defined as having at least 15 previous convictions – avoided prison last year, the highest proportion since Ministry of Justice (MoJ) records began more than a decade ago. Just 41.3 per cent received a custodial sentence, down from 46.4 per cent the previous year. Among those spared jail was one offender with 315 previous convictions who was caught stealing a £495 designer handbag from Fenwick in Newcastle and a woman who helped steal £145,000 of goods in shopping trolleys from Tesco. Retailers estimate up to 70 per cent of the thefts from their stores are carried out by just 10 per cent of offenders. Shoplifting is estimated to have cost retailers £2bn last year, adding the equivalent of £133 to every household's shopping bill. The disclosures come days after Katy Bourne, the policing chief, warned that there was no point in arresting shoplifters if courts keep setting them free without preventing offenders from carrying out further crimes. She added that it is 'madness' how many times thieves have to be arrested before ending up behind bars. Sir Keir Starmer has made tackling shoplifting a priority for his Government, pledging to introduce laws that require police to investigate even if the goods stolen are worth under £200. However, Shabana Mahmood, the Justice Secretary, is considering recommendations backing the greater use of community punishments rather than jail for less serious offences, which would include theft and shoplifting. Crime experts and former police officers blamed overcrowded prisons and court delays for the decline in custodial sentences for prolific offenders. David McKelvey, a former Scotland Yard detective whose security firm provides private 'bobbies' to protect West End retailers from shoplifters, said: 'Since the Government's early release scheme we have seen an increase in the prolific offenders returning to commit crime. 'The message currently sent out by the criminal justice system is that the risks of going to prison are negligible and so the regulars are having a field day.' Rory Geoghegan, a former No 10 adviser and the founder of the Public Safety Foundation, said: 'These figures reveal the more lenient approaches being taken by courts in response to the repeated failure to expand prison capacity. Prolific thieves rarely stop offending unless incapacitated and the best incapacitant we have currently is jail. 'Shopkeepers and retail workers across the country will be depressed to see more prolific thieves avoiding prison – at a time when their stores are being hit by surging thefts and emboldened criminals.' In the 12 months to September last year, customer thefts reported by UK retailers rose by 3.7 million to 20.4 million. Sir Keir is hoping to reverse the trend with his Policing and Crime Bill, which will reverse a so-called 'shoplifters' charter' introduced in 2014, under which theft of goods under £200 is considered 'low value'. As a 'summary' offence, it carries a maximum prison term of just six months, whereas theft of goods worth more than £200 merits up to seven years in jail. Theft including shoplifting is more likely to be a repeat offence than any other crime. MoJ data showed that last year over half (55.8 per cent) of convicted thieves had at least 15 convictions compared to 39.1 per cent for robbery and 29.1 per cent for public order. The number of prolific offenders has been rising post-Covid to the highest level since 2019. Of the 83,751 adult prolific offenders prosecuted for all types of crimes in 2024, 54,342 were spared jail - amounting to 64.9 per cent, the highest proportion for a decade and up by nearly a fifth – 19.5 per cent – on the year before. Meanwhile the number of offenders with more than 75 previous convictions or cautions jumped by more than a quarter between 2023 and 2024 to 3,356, reversing years of decline prior to the pandemic. More than half (54 per cent) of those with more than 75 convictions avoided jail. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, said: 'It's no surprise shoplifting is at record levels when there are no consequences for these scumbags. 'These prolific offenders need locking up so we can protect the public and cut crime rates. But Labour are doing precisely the opposite – they're ending short prison sentences for shoplifters and letting those in prison out early.' Labour's handling of the crisis has recently come under fire. Earlier this month Downing Street said that the Prime Minister would not call shoplifters 'scumbags' after police officers told a shopkeeper using the term that it could be offensive. Dame Diana Johnson, the policing minister, was subsequently criticised for telling shopkeepers not to place 'high value' items close to store entrances in an attempt to stop shoplifters. An MoJ spokesman said: 'The Government is delivering the largest expansion of prison places since the Victorian era – with 2,500 new spaces already delivered and 14,000 on track for delivery by 2031. 'Independent judges decide sentences and they can impose a range of tough requirements including curfews, tags and exclusion zones. Offenders who break these requirements can be sent to prison.'