Police recorded non-crime hate incident over gender row handshake refusal

By GB News (World News) | Created at 2024-11-23 09:41:19 | Updated at 2024-11-23 13:12:11 3 hours ago
Truth

Police have recorded a non-crime hate incident (NCHI) after an individual refused to shake hands following a gender row.

Warwickshire Police said that the alleged suspect’s actions were “perceived to be hate-related due to gender identity”.


More detailed information about the incident was not disclosed, although the force has insisted that the incident had been recorded “correctly” and “in line with College of Police guidance”.

The report comes as police forces come under fire for wasting time recording hate incidents, particularly after Essex Police dropped its probe into Allison Pearson's social media posts.

Warwickshire Justice Centre

More detailed information about the incident was not disclosed, although the force has insisted that the incident had been recorded “correctly” and “in line with College of Police guidance”

PA

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp hit out at police forces, saying their actions had undermined overall “confidence in policing”.

“The police should not waste any valuable time on incidents like this,” he said. “There is plenty of real crime they should be preventing and solving.

“An aggressively-administered haircut is not a police matter.

“The police should only spend time investigating or recording actual criminal allegations or incidents where there is a real and imminent risk of criminality subsequently occurring.

“The Government needs to urgently update the guidance to ensure this is the case. This nonsense undermines confidence in policing.”

Chris Philp

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp has hit out at police forces, saying their actions had undermined overall “confidence in policing”

PA

Between the start of the year and June, around 13,000 NCHIs had been recorded.

Responding to the NCHI about the “aggressive” haircut, a Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “The report was made online and later withdrawn.”

Peter Bleksley, a former Metropolitan Police detective, added: “This is ridiculous and shows how disconnected police are from what the public want.

“No wonder there is a crime wave in this country. The guidelines suggest you should only intervene in cases like this where there is fear of escalation – who ever had a fear of escalation after a bad haircut?”

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