Operation Alloy - Regional Day of Action
Police officers from across the North West joined forces today (4/7/12) to target metal thieves in a regional day of action.
Officers from the Greater Manchester, Cheshire, Lancashire, Merseyside and Cumbria Forces along with colleagues from British Transport Police raided scrap metal yards and carried out roadside checks on vehicles suspected to be handling stolen metals.
This latest crackdown comes against a backdrop of reducing metal thefts regionally and nationally. Each of the five forces in the North West report that they have helped reduce metal theft from between 39 to 48 per cent in the last year, when comparing thefts in May last year to May 2012.
Global increases in commodity prices for scrap metals especially copper and lead in the last couple of years fuelled metal thefts with thieves targeting domestic homes and community buildings.
Telecoms, electricity, water and rail and tram networks have also been targeted causing widespread disruption, expensive reinstatement costs and even endangering the lives of the general public.
Robust action by police working in partnership with local councils and staff from the affected industries has helped to reduce metal thefts but officers, utility and transport providers are keen to reduce them even further.
Law-abiding scrap metal dealers have also joined the fight against metal theft by adopting work practices that make it harder for thieves to off-load stolen metals onto them. These include information sharing agreements with police on suspected metal thieves and robust recording of information on people offering scrap metal to yards.
Almost 85 per cent of the 232 scrap metal dealers in the North West have signed up to a scheme that requires people selling scrap metal to yards to provide photo ID and proof of address making it harder for rogue dealers to operate.
Superintendent Craig Thompson from Greater Manchester Police’s Specialist Operations Branch said: ‘Over the last year officers from BTP and all five Forces in the North West have worked hard to make the region a hostile environment for metal thieves.
‘We have been confronting metal thieves on the roads and in the communities where they go about their illegal activity, arresting them for stealing metal and making them pay for driving unlicensed, untaxed, uninsured and often dangerous vehicles.
‘We have also been confronting scrap metal dealers who support these crimes by turning a blind eye to what are obviously stolen goods and refusing to fulfil their legal obligations to keep full and accurate records of transactions, that would help us to quickly bring thieves to justice.
‘Our robust policing strategy is paying dividends in protecting law abiding people from falling victim to metal thieves. Criminals can be reassured that we have no intention of changing tactics in the coming months.
‘I would urge people to help us fight metal theft by making their homes, businesses and community buildings less vulnerable to thieves by using security lights, fencing, alarms and good locks to keep thieves at bay.
‘They can also help us by providing information about suspicious activity either directly to us on 101 the new single non emergency number or anonymously through the charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
To find out more about Greater Manchester Police please visit our website.
You should call 101, the new national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.
Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.
You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.
Operation Alloy - Regional Day of Action
Police officers from across the North West joined forces today (4/7/12) to target metal thieves in a regional day of action.
Officers from the Greater Manchester, Cheshire, Lancashire, Merseyside and Cumbria Forces along with colleagues from British Transport Police raided scrap metal yards and carried out roadside checks on vehicles suspected to be handling stolen metals.
This latest crackdown comes against a backdrop of reducing metal thefts regionally and nationally. Each of the five forces in the North West report that they have helped reduce metal theft from between 39 to 48 per cent in the last year, when comparing thefts in May last year to May 2012.
Global increases in commodity prices for scrap metals especially copper and lead in the last couple of years fuelled metal thefts with thieves targeting domestic homes and community buildings.
Telecoms, electricity, water and rail and tram networks have also been targeted causing widespread disruption, expensive reinstatement costs and even endangering the lives of the general public.
Robust action by police working in partnership with local councils and staff from the affected industries has helped to reduce metal thefts but officers, utility and transport providers are keen to reduce them even further.
Law-abiding scrap metal dealers have also joined the fight against metal theft by adopting work practices that make it harder for thieves to off-load stolen metals onto them. These include information sharing agreements with police on suspected metal thieves and robust recording of information on people offering scrap metal to yards.
Almost 85 per cent of the 232 scrap metal dealers in the North West have signed up to a scheme that requires people selling scrap metal to yards to provide photo ID and proof of address making it harder for rogue dealers to operate.
Superintendent Craig Thompson from Greater Manchester Police’s Specialist Operations Branch said: ‘Over the last year officers from BTP and all five Forces in the North West have worked hard to make the region a hostile environment for metal thieves.
‘We have been confronting metal thieves on the roads and in the communities where they go about their illegal activity, arresting them for stealing metal and making them pay for driving unlicensed, untaxed, uninsured and often dangerous vehicles.
‘We have also been confronting scrap metal dealers who support these crimes by turning a blind eye to what are obviously stolen goods and refusing to fulfil their legal obligations to keep full and accurate records of transactions, that would help us to quickly bring thieves to justice.
‘Our robust policing strategy is paying dividends in protecting law abiding people from falling victim to metal thieves. Criminals can be reassured that we have no intention of changing tactics in the coming months.
‘I would urge people to help us fight metal theft by making their homes, businesses and community buildings less vulnerable to thieves by using security lights, fencing, alarms and good locks to keep thieves at bay.
‘They can also help us by providing information about suspicious activity either directly to us on 101 the new single non emergency number or anonymously through the charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
To find out more about Greater Manchester Police please visit our website.
You should call 101, the new national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.
Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.
You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.