Met to target town centre as one of London’s crime ‘hot spots’

Targeted: Croydon town centre is to be targeted in a summer clampdown on crime

Croydon town centre has been named in a list of crime “hot spots” issued today by the Metropolitan Police, among the places in London most likely to attract anti-social behaviour, theft and street crime.

Increased police patrols will be at these hotspots over the summer, with “intelligence-led” plain-clothed officers to target prolific offenders.

“It’s a step up from Mayor Perry tackling crime by uprooting a couple of street benches, I suppose,” one long-suffering town centre trader told Inside Croydon today.

The scheme is part of the Home Office’s national Safer Streets Summer Initiative, which is set to last until the end of September.

Deputy Commissioner for the Met, Matt Jukes, said the force was tackling “the crimes that matter most to Londoners”.

Other areas on the 30-strong list to be targeted in this way include Stratford and Shepherds Bush Green – both locations which have large Westfield shopping malls – as well as the Elephant and Castle, Brixton, Catford, Kingston and Lewisham.

The hot spots were identified by Metropolitan Police data which shows they account for almost one-tenth of blade offences, 1-in-4 thefts and 6% of all anti-social behaviour calls.

Latest monthly Met figures show 102,083 shoplifting offences were recorded in the year to May, an annual increase of 41.9%.

Shoplifting is estimated to cost the capital’s retailers £16.8million every month.

The Met’s blitz will be “a multi-agency operation” by the Met, MOPAC, the Mayor’s office for policing and crime, as well as local authorities and community partners.

According to the Met, the force has solved 163% more cases of shoplifting in the first six weeks of this financial year compared to last.

Deputy mayor for policing and crime, Kaya Comer-Schwartz, said: “The safety of our town centres is more than just policing – it’s about building stronger, more connected communities where everyone feels secure.”

The Met has been using live facial recognition cameras on Croydon’s North End shopping area since 2023, and now has permission for permanent anti-crime cameras to be installed, despite concerns raised by civil rights groups.

Secure: deputy mayor Kaya Comer-Schwartz

The town centre clampdown in Croydon does, however, undermine Mayor Jason Perry’s pitch to renew his PSPO in the town centre based on claims that it has been effective at deterring anti-social behaviour and petty crime. The Met’s stats contradict that claim.

Perry’s council wants to renew its Public Space Protection Order, or PSPO, in Croydon town centre. Public Space Protection Orders came into existence under the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 and give councils the “additional” powers to issue on-the-spot fines for offences such as littering and street-drinking. Croydon town centre had a PSPO from 2017 to 2020, while the latest one is coming to the end of its three-year term.

The police already have wide-ranging powers under existing legislation to move people on or arrest them if they have proper due cause. PSPO’s allow councils to hire in private security firms to act as high street “bounty hunters”, often collecting commissions on every fine issued.

PSPOs have also been used to restrict public access to public areas, often in the interest of private businesses and property owners.

Read more: Town centre PSPO is another Perry failure. It’s time to scrap it
Read more: Shock and inaction is numbing communities to these killings
Read more: 10,000 sign Liberty petition against facial recognition cameras


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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
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7 Responses to Met to target town centre as one of London’s crime ‘hot spots’

  1. Is Mayor Perry going to claim this as one of his successes?

  2. Hazel swain says:

    It’s not patrols we need … its arrests , convictions and imprisonment, with a ban from returning to the Borough. The police need to be supported by the Courts and Government.. no soft sentences, tagging or slaps on the wrists .. get perpetrators off the streets and keep them off the streets .IMO.

  3. Sam Olvier says:

    Meanwhile ‘URW considering sale of Croydon development site after cost overrun of Hamburg mega-project’ RIP Croydon.

    • Carl Lucas says:

      You can guarantee that Steven will have an article out about this soon. It’s damning of URW’s lack of confidence in Perry being able to deliver for Croydon. Certainly this couldn’t be worse timing for Perry, he would have been pinning his re-election hopes on this development.

  4. Margaret Kelly says:

    We have the live facial recognition in the town centre now. It’s caught I think 300 or so criminals in Croydon Town Centre alone. I feel a lot safer walking along North End now.

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