UK crime minister’s wallet stolen at police conference

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Diana Johnson was discussing a criminal “epidemic” at a senior officers’ event

The British minister for policing and crime prevention, Diana Johnson, had her purse stolen while speaking about rising lawlessness at a conference for top police officials on Tuesday.

The incident happened during the annual Police Superintendents’ Association (PSA) conference in Kenilworth, as confirmed by the ministry to the Financial Times. Warwickshire Police reported that they are investigating a theft at the hotel hosting the event. A 56-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of burglary and has since been released on bail, according to the police.

In her speech at the PSA conference, Johnson, who holds the Home Office position under the new Labour government, vowed to “restore respect for the rule of law on British streets, including restoring respect for the police, which has sadly eroded over many years.”

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Town centers across the country have been “gripped by an epidemic of antisocial behavior, theft, and shoplifting,” she stated.

Despite the efforts of “thousands of incredible police officers” and other staff doing an “admirable” job, Johnson acknowledged, “we must face the reality that there are still too many victims of antisocial behavior who feel that when they call the police, no one listens, no one comes, and nothing is done.”

This month, the UK decided to release thousands of prisoners early amid a jail overcrowding crisis, coinciding with hundreds of arrests during riots across the country. PSA President Nick Smart told the conference that the move left the police at the center of a storm not of their making.

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Leading up to the landslide election victory that ended 14 years of Conservative rule, Labour pledged to crack down on crime. Johnson reiterated some of her party’s slogans at the PSA, promising to revitalize neighborhood policing.

Meanwhile, trust in the British police is falling to record lows, according to YouGov polls. More than half of Britons lack confidence that the police can effectively address crime, with 15% expressing no confidence in the UK’s police at all.

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