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| Thread ID: 124031 | 2012-04-02 00:10:00 | Press Release: Fall in recorded crime in NZ the lowest for 15 Years | WalOne (4202) | PC World Chat |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1267885 | 2012-04-02 00:10:00 | From the Police site Title: Police spurred on by fall in crime Latest crime statistics show recorded crime continued to drop in 2011, with a 4.8 percent decrease from the last calendar year. This result represents the lowest number of recorded offences for New Zealand for fifteen years, and continues the steady decline in recorded crime over previous years. There were 20,289 fewer offences recorded in 2011 than during the previous calendar year, with 406,056 offences recorded between 1 January 2011 and 31 December 2011. After taking into account the 0.8 percent rise in New Zealands resident population over the same period, the fall in crime rate for 2011 is 5.6 percent. Deputy Police Commissioner Mike Bush said that the results are a good sign that police and the public remain serious about reducing crime, but that we still have much to do. These results show us that were on the right track with our frontline focus and the work were doing with communities and other agencies to prevent crime from happening in the first place. It just motivates us to do even more to keep the downward trend going. We stay firmly targeted on bringing crime further down across the board. The largest decreases were in Canterbury (-22.2 percent), Southern (-13.1 percent), Northland (-10.5 percent), and Bay of Plenty (-5.6 percent). Auckland City and Waikato were the only two districts that saw an increase with 8.3% and 1.7% respectively. The overall national resolution rate remains relatively steady at 47 percent. Homicide and related offending dropped 14.4 percent, down 14 offences from last year. Last year saw the lowest number of murders in a calendar year since 1995, with 39 murders recorded, compared with 46 in the 2010. The latest figures also show that: Acts intended to cause injury, which are mainly assault-related offences, dropped by 5 percent (down 2,237 offences) in 2011. Illicit drug offences reduced by 9.8 percent, from 22,995 to 20,739 offences. The largest reductions were in cannabis (-11.6 percent) and new drugs, mostly methamphetamine (-10.8 percent). Theft and related offending, which makes up over 30 percent of all recorded offences, was down by 1,490 offences this year, a 1.1 percent reduction on the previous year. Nationally, 20,724 vehicles were recorded stolen (up by 733) but thefts from cars dropped from 38,669 offences to 38,174. Recorded sexual assault and related offences, known to be under reported to Police in previous years, rose by 14.9 percent, which means 450 more offences were reported in 2011 than in the previous year. Property damage and environmental pollution offences, the majority relating to wilful damage, dropped by 11.1 percent. The decrease may be attributed to higher levels of security in high risk areas, including increased patrols. Abduction, harassment and other related offences against a person dropped by 8.5 percent in 2011, and robbery, extortion and related offences dropped by 7.3 percent. Offences related to dangerous or negligent acts endangering persons, which makes up less than half a percent of all recorded crime, rose by 14 percent in 2011, an increase of 120 offences from the previous calendar year. Last year saw New Zealand dealing with significant events. We dealt with devastating lows like the Canterbury earthquakes and experienced highs like the Rugby World Cup, says Deputy Commissioner Mike Bush. This continued drop in crime is a good indication that, at a fundamental level, New Zealand is fed up with crime and serious about getting the numbers of offences down. Police want to make the most of that, which means stepping up our focus on working more closely with communities and other agencies to stop crime from happening in the first place by addressing the risks that lead to offending. These results are one indicator we use to tell us whats working, where we can do more, and where our resources should be pointed. More and more we know that effective policing is about having the right people in the right place at the right time; this includes taking opportunities to address the risks of offending while keeping our frontline strong and active in addressing crime. Thats why we have a new operating model under our Policing Excellence strategy that is more strongly aimed at freeing up our people on the frontline to go where theyre needed and take action where its warranted. It gives us a framework that allows us to keep working to better understand the risks, better understand where our work has the most impact and the best outcomes for New Zealand. It puts preventing crime and making people, especially victims, safe at the heart of everything we do. Deputy Commissioner Bush says that the Governments increased focus on public agencies working more closely together is another indication that the time is right to address crime more proactively. More and more we are thinking and acting strategically, looking at the bigger picture and understanding the full impact of reducing crime on New Zealands present and future. Theres definitely strength in numbers. Working together more closely means as public agencies we can better target our resources in the right ways, addressing the serious matters that are costing people their lives, their wellbeing, their ability to live and work safely and ultimately New Zealands ability to thrive as a country, socially, culturally and economically. But despite the positive results, Deputy Commissioner Bush is clear that the pressure on crime is here to stay. We are very clear about our job and what we need to do to make New Zealand a safe place to live, work and visit. Ask any member of Police and theyll tell you that one victim is one victim too many. Our job is not done, but we are on the right track. These latest crime statistics merely spur us on. Ends |
WalOne (4202) | ||
| 1267886 | 2012-04-02 00:21:00 | Good news, but should be taken with a grain or two of salt. "Recorded Crime" is not the same as "Reported Crime", although typically, the stuff that goes unreported is of a less serious nature... | johcar (6283) | ||
| 1267887 | 2012-04-02 01:28:00 | That echoes my thoughts as well... that the 'improvement' could in fact be due to people believing it is pointless to report minor incidents, as sod all short of homicide seems to get any attention. Car crime, vandalism, disturbing the peace... gets sod all response, so people learnt there's sod all point in reporting it... which in turn is the start of a slippery slope towards disorder. |
Paul.Cov (425) | ||
| 1267888 | 2012-04-02 02:28:00 | The Police appear to be patting themselves on the back for having less recorded crime. People are not bothering to report crime because the Police cannot or do have the staff to do anything about it. There is a lot of unreported crime out there and people are losing faith in the Police to handle less serious crime. The criminals must be having a field day. The Police need more resources and personnel to handle crime. Reports like this do not paint a true picture. |
Bobh (5192) | ||
| 1267889 | 2012-04-02 03:19:00 | Who wrote " Fall in recorded crime in NZ the lowest for 15 Years"? Does it mean that the reduction, year on year, is the smallest jn the last 15 years? I suspect not. |
martynz (5445) | ||
| 1267890 | 2012-04-02 11:30:00 | Fortunately we live in a relatively safe country with low crimes rates. Police are hardly motivated to reduce reported crime - if they are too successful then they reduce Police numbers as well. So they have to balance appearing to have crime under control but not being too good so they don't lose Police numbers. MOJ I believe does surveys of people on what crime they experienced irrespective of whether they reported it to Police - so that would act as a measure that might at least reflect actual crime rates. Not sure if they publish the results - haven't looked on their wen site to see. |
Twelvevolts (5457) | ||
| 1267891 | 2012-04-02 12:09:00 | This article (www.nzherald.co.nz) appeared in the Herald. It is about unreported crime and refers to comments made by Police officers. | Bobh (5192) | ||
| 1267892 | 2012-04-02 15:23:00 | The headline is full of all sorts of semantics though. A decline in REPORTED crime is one. That infers that the fall of recorded crime is the lowest and that the metrics of crime have actually increased. Youse guys speaks funni. |
SurferJoe46 (51) | ||
| 1267893 | 2012-04-02 20:03:00 | If we could better access to guns our crime rates would fall further. Start would be a "stand your ground law" like most states in USA have. Where you could blast a thug if he was in a place he shouldn't be in. |
prefect (6291) | ||
| 1267894 | 2012-04-02 20:34:00 | If we could better access to guns our crime rates would fall further. Start would be a "stand your ground law" like most states in USA have. Where you could blast a thug if he was in a place he shouldn't be in. I'm not too sure of that reference. I know Florida has that, but I know if you shoot someone out in the open, you'd better have a very life-threatening situation going on. In California, you'd better drag anyone you shoot totally INTO your house for a decent chance of a defense in court. Not sure of Montana yet - but I haven't asked either. |
SurferJoe46 (51) | ||
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