Fewer offenders jailed for knife crime in Greater Manchester
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Anti-knife crime charity the Ben Kinsella Trust said further investment in the court system is needed to help it keep up with rising knife crime across the England and Wales.
Ministry of Justice figures show 332 offenders in Greater Manchester were given an immediate sentence in the year to September – accounting for 34 per cent of knife crime offenders who went through the criminal justice system.
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Hide AdThis was down on the proportion of offenders handed an immediate sentence in 2020-21 (38 per cent), and below the proportion two years prior (44 per cent).
Overall, about 11 per cent of the 986 offenders in Greater Manchester who went through the criminal justice system were cautioned, 22 per cent were given community sentences and 24 per cent were suspended sentences.
Across England and Wales, nearly 19,400 knife and offensive weapon offences were formally dealt with – a decrease of five per cent since the year ending September 2021.
This is despite separate figures showing an 11 per cent increase in knife crime over the course of the same period.
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Hide AdPatrick Green, Ben Kinsella Trust chief executive, said the figures show a difference between recorded knife crime and the number of offences that finally make it into court.
"They also show that there is now a higher likelihood that a knife crime offender will be served with a suspended sentence rather than go to jail for their crime," he added.
He said sanctions imposed by the courts are failing to change the behaviour of habitual offenders, and the courts system needs more investment to keep pace with increasing knife crime figures.
He said: "But we cannot rely solely on the criminal justice system to resolve this issue on its own. We must widen our focus to stop knife crime at source by investing more in our young people and the services that support and divert them away from crime."
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Hide AdOn a national level, the figures showed the average length of sentences for possession of a knife or offensive weapon increased slightly from 7.4 months in 2020-21 to 7.6 months last year.