Mar. 15 2024
Source Page: Door supervisors: training, criminality checks, misconductFound: Licensed January 202120Qualifications for a Vehicle Immobiliser licence It is illegal to immobilise vehicles
Mar. 15 2024
Source Page: Door supervisors: training, criminality checks, misconductFound: Licensed March 202224Qualifications for a Vehicle Immobiliser licence It is illegal to immobilise vehicles
Mar. 15 2024
Source Page: Door supervisors: training, criminality checks, misconductFound: Ye sGet Licensed 201919 Qualifications for a Vehicle Immobiliser licence It is illegal to immobilise vehicles
Mar. 12 2024
Source Page: Fingermark visualisation source bookFound: Silicone grease Lard Ulta foundation RS anti -seize compound Coca Cola Ulta eyeshadow Shell motor
Mar. 12 2024
Source Page: Fingermark visualisation source bookFound: Silicone grease Lard Ulta foundation RS anti -seize compound Coca Cola Ulta eyeshadow Shell motor
Mar. 11 2024
Source Page: DfT: Independent Complaints Assessor report for 2022 to 2023Found: The agency was prepared to accept repaired vehicles as original but not modified vehicles.
Correspondence Mar. 08 2024
Committee: Welsh Affairs Committee (Department: Wales Office)Found: the value of prevention, but on thi s particular occasion an estimate has been made : Based on the theft
Mentions:
1: Mark Harper (Con - Forest of Dean) the Motor Insurers’ Bureau on the arrangements that will be in place. - Speech Link
2: Iain Stewart (Con - Milton Keynes South) To give some idea of the scale, figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders estimate - Speech Link
3: Matt Western (Lab - Warwick and Leamington) The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders estimates that its total turnover in the UK economy is - Speech Link
Asked by: Feryal Clark (Labour - Enfield North)
Question to the Home Office:
To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what estimate he has made of the number of stolen cars returned to their owners in each of the last three years.
Answered by Chris Philp - Minister of State (Home Office)
The Government is committed to tackling vehicle crime.
The latest estimates from the Crime Survey for England and Wales shows there were 726,000 incidents of vehicle-related theft in the year ending September 2023. This represents a 39% fall, when compared with the year ending March 2010, when there was an estimated 1,198,000 such incidents.
The Government is working closely with police and motor manufacturers through the National Vehicle Crime Working Group, chaired by ACC Jennifer Sims, the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for vehicle crime, to take forward a programme of work to prevent and reduce vehicle crime nationally. This includes training police officers on methods used to steal vehicles, encouraging vehicle owners to secure their vehicles and working with industry to prevent theft. A network of vehicle crime leads has been established in every police force in England and Wales, ensuring forces share information about emerging trends in vehicle crime and are better able to tackle regional issues.
We are legislating through the Criminal Justice Bill to create two new offences where a person possesses, makes, adapts, supplies or offers to supply electronic devices where there are reasonable grounds to suspect they will be used in vehicle theft. The legislation will make it easier for police to prosecute criminals making and supplying these devices, as well as vehicle thieves.
The Crime Survey for England and Wales publishes annual estimates on the proportion of stolen vehicles returned to owners which can be found within the ‘Nature of crime: Vehicle related thefts’. The latest available figures from the 2019/20 CSEW, estimated that in 28% of thefts the vehicle was returned to its owner, 34% in the 2018/19 survey and 40% in the 2017/18 survey.
No assessment has been made of the number of vehicles stolen by under 18s and there are currently no plans to publish the minutes of meeting on car theft since November 2023.
Asked by: Feryal Clark (Labour - Enfield North)
Question to the Home Office:
To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if he will publish the minutes of meetings he has had on car theft since November 2023.
Answered by Chris Philp - Minister of State (Home Office)
The Government is committed to tackling vehicle crime.
The latest estimates from the Crime Survey for England and Wales shows there were 726,000 incidents of vehicle-related theft in the year ending September 2023. This represents a 39% fall, when compared with the year ending March 2010, when there was an estimated 1,198,000 such incidents.
The Government is working closely with police and motor manufacturers through the National Vehicle Crime Working Group, chaired by ACC Jennifer Sims, the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for vehicle crime, to take forward a programme of work to prevent and reduce vehicle crime nationally. This includes training police officers on methods used to steal vehicles, encouraging vehicle owners to secure their vehicles and working with industry to prevent theft. A network of vehicle crime leads has been established in every police force in England and Wales, ensuring forces share information about emerging trends in vehicle crime and are better able to tackle regional issues.
We are legislating through the Criminal Justice Bill to create two new offences where a person possesses, makes, adapts, supplies or offers to supply electronic devices where there are reasonable grounds to suspect they will be used in vehicle theft. The legislation will make it easier for police to prosecute criminals making and supplying these devices, as well as vehicle thieves.
The Crime Survey for England and Wales publishes annual estimates on the proportion of stolen vehicles returned to owners which can be found within the ‘Nature of crime: Vehicle related thefts’. The latest available figures from the 2019/20 CSEW, estimated that in 28% of thefts the vehicle was returned to its owner, 34% in the 2018/19 survey and 40% in the 2017/18 survey.
No assessment has been made of the number of vehicles stolen by under 18s and there are currently no plans to publish the minutes of meeting on car theft since November 2023.