• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Baron Grey Solicitors
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
    • Commercial Law
    • Criminal Law
    • Family Law
    • Immigration
    • Property Services
    • Wills and Probate
  • Our People
    • Vincent Hambleton-Grey
    • Emma Faulkner
    • Ben Hall
    • Lara Symons
    • Minnie Waite
  • Resources
    • Costs
    • Blog
    • Terms of Business
    • Complaints
  • Contact

Baron Grey Limited

April 13, 2018 By Baron Grey Limited

Knife Crime – Will Increasing Stop and Search Make a Difference?

35 people have been fatally stabbed in London since the beginning of the year, with more than 50 fatalities in the UK as a whole in the same period. According to recent figures released by the Office of National Statistics, stabbings in London are at their highest level for 6 years, with a staggering 23% rise from the previous year. It has been widely commented that there have been more murders in London in the past 4 months than in New York, something that would have been considered inconceivable only a short time ago.

The government and the courts have been concerned about the rising use of knives in the commission of criminal offences for some time. Increased sentences for knife offences have been around since 2008 and a there is now a minimum 6 month prison sentence for those who are convicted of a knife offence for a second time.

Why then, are these deterrents not making a difference? One factor may be the reduction in the use of stop and search powers by the police. For many years the police were heavily criticised for what was perceived to be an indiscriminate use of these powers by disproportionately targeting ethnic minority groups without reasonable grounds for doing so. For instance, black people were 6 times more likely to be stopped and searched than white people.

When Theresa May was Home Secretary, she openly criticised the police for their stop and search powers, so much so that the numbers of stop and search began to fall dramatically. Since her election to the role of Prime Minister, the numbers have kept on falling. For instance, people from a white background saw a 38% decrease in stop and search between 2016 and 2017.

So what powers do the police have to detain a person for purposes of a search? Generally speaking, the police are entitled to stop and search an individual if they have reasonable grounds for suspecting that a person is carrying illegal drugs, weapons, stolen property or an object used for the commission of a crime. The police officer must give you their name, the police station they are from and the reason they want to search you. They must tell you what they expect to find.

Will increasing the use of stop and search, and perhaps controversially, targeting certain groups within society (as advocated by Trevor Phillips), lead to a decrease in the shocking statistics we have seen recently? Certainly, something needs to be done. People need to feel safe where they live. The decrease in police numbers and lack of “bobbies on the beat” contribute to the feeling that the police have abandoned the streets to the criminals. When was the last time you saw an officer patrolling your local neighbourhood? Perhaps we should look at the modelled approach in tackling violent crime that has proved so successful in both New York, closer to home, Glasgow? This may work in the short-term, but a long-term sustainable solution is needed, for which there is no simple answer.

The causes run deep. Policing, and with it stop and search, is only one part of the solution. Money must be found to tackle poverty and increase educational awareness of those who are the most impressionable, such as the young. Only when the root causes are tackled will knife crime diminish on a long-term basis.

Written By : Ben Hall & Simran Chawla

March 26, 2018 By Baron Grey Limited

Drink Driving – Not Just Ant’s Saturday Night Takeaway

Drink driving once again hit the headlines this month when Ant McPartlin, part of the famous and long-standing duo “Ant and Dec”, was arrested and subsequently charged with driving with excess alcohol.

Drink driving is one of those unusual offences in so much as it is prevalent across the whole spectrum of society. Most offending can broadly be associated with a root cause such as poverty or drug addiction. It is no shock that that a higher percentage of offenders have mental health problems than exist in the population at large. Drink driving on the other hand has no underlying factors other than the perception of risk – taking a chance that you feel fine, or you won’t get caught, or it’s not really that bad. Young or old, rich or poor, male or female, it doesn’t matter.

I’m not pre-judging Ant McPartlin, and none of us should either. He hasn’t been convicted of any offence. He may plead not guilty. We shouldn’t trust all we read in the papers, particularly when the family in the other vehicle splash their story all across the pages of a tabloid newspaper before the matter has even gone to court.

What I can say is that drink driving and other alcohol-related driving offences such as being drunk in charge of a vehicle can be a complex area of law to deal with. It may not be as simple as drinking alcohol, getting in a car and then driving. What if you drank the night before, feel fine, and then make the decision to drive to work? Do you know if you are over the alcohol limit?

What about the scenario where you’ve had a few drinks, you’ve locked yourself out of your home, and you make the decision to get in your car, turn on the engine in order to get the fans blowing hot air to warm you up, and then you fall asleep? You may not think so, but you are putting yourself at risk of being charged with a criminal offence.

The consequences of a conviction can be devastating. Not only will you lose your licence, but it may also mean losing your job. What do you do if you need your car in order to earn a living? What if your wife and your children rely on you financially? Even if this isn’t the case, your conviction may mean that the holiday to the United States is now off, as they won’t let you into the country with a criminal conviction.

Here at Baron Grey Solicitors we won’t judge you. Good people sometimes make bad decisions.  It’s our job to convince the court that you deserve a second chance.

Should the offence be denied, then we have access to the best experts and counsel in the country to assist you in winning your case. You will find our tailored approach to your case second-to-none. You will always receive good, honest, straightforward advice. You expect high standards. We deliver them.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3

Primary Sidebar

Online Enquiry

If you would like us to call you, please complete the form below and one of our solicitors will be delighted to call you back.

IMPORTANT NOTICE: The information you provide will be only used by us to administer your enquiry and any response. Use of this form does not create a solicitor-client relationship and information transmitted will not necessarily be treated as privileged or confidential. If you are a client, please get in touch with your usual firm contact directly for the most timely response.

I have read and accept these terms

Footer

Services

  • Commercial Law
  • Criminal Law
  • Family Law
  • Immigration
  • Property Services
  • Wills and Probate

Our Advantages

We are a small, approachable and highly experienced firm of solicitors with in depth knowledge of the law in the fields we specialise in.

  • Experienced
  • Affordable fees
  • Deal with the principal directly

Contact Us

  • Langtry House, 441 Richmond Road,
    Twickenham, TW1 2EF
  • Tel: 020 8891 4311
  • Tel: 020 8891 4044
  • Fax: 020 8891 2058
  • Email: info@barongrey.co.uk
  • Opening Hours: Mon-Fri | 9:00am-5:30pm

Conveyancing Quality Scheme


Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2021 · Authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority of England and Wales with registered number 382230
Created and hosted by LEAP · Log in

This site tracks visits anonymously using cookies. Close this dialogue to confirm you are happy with that or find out more in the Privacy Policy. Agree and close
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Necessary
Always Enabled