Case Studies

Knife sale agreement

by Mark Rowe

More retailers have joined a voluntary agreement against the sale of knives to the underaged. Boots UK, the Co-op, B&Q and Aldi have committed to safeguards on the sale and delivery of knives by age verification checks, staff training, and secure display of knives. Already signed up are Tesco, Lidl UK, Wilko, Argos, Morrisons, Asda, Poundland, Sainsbury’s, John Lewis, Amazon UK, Ebay UK and Waitrose.

Between July and September this year, 4,937 knife possession offences were formally dealt with by the criminal justice system, says the Home Office; near one in five, 19pc were juveniles.

Home Office Minister for Vulnerability, Safeguarding and Countering Extremism Sarah Newton said: “Knife crime can have devastating consequences and we will act wherever necessary to reduce violence and keep our communities safe. It is very important that retailers have robust checks to prevent sales of knives to under 18s, both in stores and online, and I welcome the commitment from Aldi, B&Q, Boots, Co-op to help tackle this issue. Our modern crime prevention strategy published in March set out a range of measures to strengthen our response to knife crime, but we know there is more to be done and we will continue to work with the police, retailers and voluntary groups.

Andrew Pope, Head of Risk at the Co-operative, said: “We are committed to supporting efforts to tackle knife crime and would urge all retailers to implement restrictions to prevent the sale of knives to children. These measures, such as proof of age at point of purchase and the safe and secure packaging of such products, can all help to make local communities safer.”

The Government says the agreement on sales of knives is part of a wider approach to tackling knife crime which includes law enforcement. Police ran weeks of action to tackle knife crime under Operation Sceptre in February, April, June and October this year.

In October, 21 police forces across the country took part in Operation Sceptre which includes targeting habitual knife carriers, weapon sweeps, test purchases of knives from retailers, and use of surrender bins.

National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) Lead on Knife Crime, Chief Constable Alf Hitchcock, said: “Police forces across the country have responded to continuing concerns around knife offences, which have started to increase following a long-term downward trend. In our latest operation, Operation Sceptre 6, we targeted habitual offenders in crime hotspots, resulting in hundreds of arrests and 1,200 weapons seized. The service has also worked with Trading Standards to identify retailers who are failing to meet their responsibilities under the law on selling. There is no easy solution to the scourge of knife crime, which impacts our communities and their feelings of safety. Tackling violence involving knives remains a key priority for the police service and we intend to keep up the momentum. More activity is already being planned for 2017.”

In August 2016 the government also banned the sale, manufacture and import of so-called zombie knives by adding them to the list of prohibited offensive weapons.

Ebay UK and Amazon UK have also made a commitment to enforce age restricted sales online.

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