Mary Wakefield Mary Wakefield

Abandoning stop and search would be abandoning a generation of kids

It was somehow inevitable that shortly after Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick announced a fall in violent crime, there would be an absolute horror-show of death across the capital. The ‘weekend of bloodshed’ began on Friday 14 June with the murder of 18-year-old Cheyon Evans, knifed by teens in Wandsworth. A few minutes later Eniola Aluko was shot dead in Plumstead, then three men were hospitalised in Clapham, another dead of knife wounds in Tower Hamlets, and another an hour later in Enfield. In Stratford the next day, by the Westfield shopping centre, more than 100 young men attacked and injured a handful of police officers. A section 60 order (which gives police the right to search for weapons) was issued and a socking great blade, of the sort you might use to gut a moose, was discovered and confiscated.

It’s sad but not surprising. What did alarm me, though, was the way that weekend was reported the following Monday.

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