Cambridge scientist says police IT must be 'urgently refined' to tackle knife crime
Police could gauge which neighbourhoods are most likely to suffer fatal stabbings by looking at non-fatal knife assault data from the previous year, a study by Cambridge University suggests.
A Met Police detective manually trawled through crime data for 2016-17 andgeo-coded 3,506 incidents where people were stabbed and cut but survived, using London's 4,835 local census areas.
The data was then compared to the locations of the 97 London homicides in the 2017-18 financial year.
Research, published in the Cambridge Journal of Evidence-Based Policing,indicates that the number of assaults resulting in knife injuries over one yearcorrelates with an increased risk of deadly knife crime the next year.
"If assault data forecasts that a neighbourhood is more likely to experienceknife homicide, police commanders might consider everything from closermonitoring of school exclusions to localised use of stop-and-search," saidstudy co-author Prof Lawrence Sherman from the University of Cambridge."Better data is needed to fight knife homicide. The current definition of knife crime is too broad to be useful, and lumps together knife-enabled injuries with knife threats or even arrests for carrying knives."
Current crime statistics do not distinguish between incidents without injury -displaying of knives during robberies, for example - and those where knives have wounded.
"Police IT is in urgent need of refinement," he said. "Instead of justkeeping case records for legal uses, the systems should be designed to detect crime patterns for prioritising targets.
"We need to transform IT from electronic filing cabinets into a daily crimeforecasting tool."
Each assault analysed in the study was coded to a local census areas, some as small as a few football fields.
More than half of London - 2,781 areas - had no knife assaults at all in thefirst year. Of these areas, 1% saw a homicide in year two.
Of the 41 neighbourhoods that had six or more injuries from knife assaults in the first year, 15% went on to suffer a homicide the following year.
The researchers argue that this reveals a large increase in homicide risk.
Detective Chief Inspector John Massey from the Met's Homicide Command, who went through the data, said: "These findings indicate that officers can be deployed in a smaller number of areas in the knowledge that they will have the best chances there to prevent knife-enabled homicides."
The study cautioned that using data to focus on assault hotspots is not a"panacea", but Prof Sherman said it could "enhance the effectiveness ofscarce resources" when combined with intelligence-gathering on the streets.
The study's authors say the last decade of deadly knife crime has been a"moving target".
The research found that in the 10 years up to 2018, there were 590 knifehomicides across London spread over 523 different census areas - suggesting little repetition of homicide location.
The 41 top hotspots in the study contained only 6% of the following year'stotal knife deaths.
No single area in the 2017-18 financial year had more than one fatal stabbing.
However, 69% of the knife homicides occurred in census areas where at least one non-fatal knife assault had taken place the year before.