National Audit Office Press Notice
Reducing Vehicle Crime
THIS STATEMENT IS NOT FOR PUBLICATION OR BROADCAST BEFORE 00.01 HOURS ON FRIDAY 28 JANUARY 2005
Report by the Comptroller and Auditor General
HC 183 2004-2005
28 January 2005
ISBN: 0102932042
Price: £10.75
Full Report
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Executive Summary
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Sir John Bourn, head of the National Audit Office, reported today that the Home Office, together with other organisations, has instigated a number of programmes which have helped reduce thefts of and from vehicles by 30 per cent since 1999. This is a significant achievement but he added that there is nevertheless scope to reduce such crimes even further. According to the British Crime Survey 2003-04 there were 241,000 thefts of vehicles, 1.3 million thefts from vehicles and 543,000 attempted thefts of or from vehicles. In addition to the distress and inconvenience that vehicle crimes cause, Home Office research estimates that thefts of and from vehicles cost society around £2.1 billion a year.
In assessing the Home Office’s efforts the NAO found that:
- Good progress has been made in working with the motor industry to bring
about new improvements in the security of vehicles. These improvements are
likely to be the main reason for the reduction in thefts of vehicles.
- Steady progress has been made in improving police enforcement to deter
criminals. Detection rates remain low compared to other offences, but the
introduction of the Automatic Number Plate Recognition system could lead to
further significant improvements.
- Good progress has been made in raising public awareness of vehicle crime.
The NAO report identifies a number of areas where more needs to be done to tackle vehicle crime:
- Progress in making car parks more secure has been slower. Not enough car
parks provide a safe and secure environment for motorists, although the
introduction of the Safer Parking Scheme has begun to make a difference.
- The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency has provided the Police with
vehicle record data sufficient to enable them to trace the registered keeper
in 90 per cent of cases. However, its absolute vehicle record accuracy (with
32 per cent of vehicle records with some level of inaccuracy) must be improved
to facilitate the more effective use of automated enforcement. It has already
taken significant steps to address the underlying causes but should continue
to take action to ensure that the measured accuracy of the detailed record
does improve.
- The Home Office has sought to make it more difficult for offenders to
benefit from vehicle crime, but further progress is required.
- Criminals can still purchase number plates from
unregistered suppliers in Scotland and Northern Ireland, although this
should no longer be possible in England and Wales.
- Tighter regulation of salvage operators should make it more difficult for the identity of written-off vehicles to be used to enable stolen vehicles to be re-sold. But over half of the 200 local authorities with the highest rates of vehicle crime had yet to set up a register of salvage operators or had no operators on their registers.
The report recommends that the Home Office encourages all hospitals and railway companies to make their car parks secure. The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency needs to improve the accuracy of its vehicle records to help the Police identify stolen vehicles better. The Home Office needs to remind Local Authorities of their obligations to set up a register of motor salvage operators and the Department should explore further how it could co-ordinate its publicity campaigns more closely with local initiatives to tackle vehicle crime.
Sir John said today:
"The Home Office is on track to meet its target of a 30 per cent reduction in
vehicle crime between 1999 and 2004 which is a significant achievement. However,
the continuing number and impact of these crimes means that momentum needs to be
maintained once the deadline for this target has expired.
Many of the initiatives to tackle vehicle crime that are in place have yet to be
fully implemented. Local authorities, car park operators, the Police and Crime
and Disorder Reduction Partnerships can all do more to tackle the problem, and
progress will be helped by the Home Office and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing
Agency improving the information and advice it provides these organisations."
Notes for Editors:
- The Home Office surveys up to 40,000 people a year to determine whether they have been a victim of crime in the last twelve months. Whilst only an estimate, this measure of crime is more comprehensive as not all crimes are reported to the Police.
-
The earlier National Audit Office report ‘Reducing Crime: the Home Office
working with Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnerships’ examined the Home Office
grants of £926.8 million since 1999 to Partnerships.
Press notices and reports are available from the date of publication on the NAO website, which is now at www.nao.org.uk. Hard copies can be obtained from The Stationery Office on 0845 702 3474. - The Comptroller and Auditor General, Sir John Bourn, is the head of the National Audit Office which employs some 800 staff. He and the NAO are totally independent of Government. He certifies the accounts of all Government departments and a wide range of other public sector bodies; and he has statutory authority to report to Parliament on the economy, efficiency and effectiveness with which departments and other bodies have used their resources.
Press Notice 09/05
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