44,000 Pints Seized From Underage Public Drinkers During Half Term Clampdown
April 9, 2008
Police seized 20,945 liters of alcoholic drinks (44,265 pints) from underage drinkers during a February half term clamp down on public drinking, Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker announced today.
The £760,000 Home Office-funded campaign took place from 8-24 February 2008 in 165 police force areas across 39 forces in England and Wales.
The results are the latest success in a wide ranging program of enforcement action and education by Government, police, schools and local authorities designed to tackle underage drinking. In the coming months the Government will publish a Youth Alcohol Action Plan which will focus on providing information for parents and young people to make sensible and healthy decisions around drinking, as well as continuing to reduce drinking in public and underage sales.
The campaign was targeted to coincide with the school half term holiday in each area. Acting on public tip-offs and local intelligence, police officers and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) approached groups of youngsters in underage drinking hotspots and confiscated alcohol wherever they found it. At the same time they asked how old the children were and from where they had obtained alcohol.
If they thought crime and disorder was likely to occur, officers also used directions to leave powers to disperse threatening groups.
The national campaign, which followed a much smaller pilot during the October 2007 half term, produced the following figures:
* 25 per cent of the 5,143 youngsters who surrendered alcohol to the police said they were aged 15 or under;
* a total of 23,621 youngsters came into contact with the police when alcohol was confiscated;
* 3,585 directions to leave were issued; and
* of the 30 per cent who divulged where they had sourced their alcohol, half said they had bought it from a shop.
Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker said:
“Confiscating alcohol is just one part of our strategy to address the damage and disruption that underage drinking causes to youngsters, their families and the communities they live in. We are working across Government to combine tough enforcement of the law with effective alcohol education for children and parents and to help young people find alternative things to do.
“I know the public will welcome police action to disperse groups of threatening youths and choke their supply of alcohol. This campaign will not be the last.
“I also want to remind parents of their responsibility and where poor parenting is identified as an issue I want to see greater use of parenting contracts to tackle persistent underage drinking. I also want to see greater sharing of information between police and local agencies about repeat offenders to address problems as early as possible.
“Police officers tell me that these campaigns yield valuable intelligence about where children get their alcohol. With this in mind, I want to send a strong signal once again to those persistent few irresponsible retailers that deliberately sell to under-18s. They will be caught and they will be punished. I also want to congratulate all the officers involved in what was clearly a successful campaign for their hard work and dedication.”
Also published today were results of the December 2007 Responsible Alcohol Sales Campaign (RASC) which took place two months before the underage confiscation began. Officers from 90 Basic Command Units across 30 forces visited 1,741 visited poorly managed premises known to be associated with alcohol-related violence, crime and disorder to check compliance with the law.
Over 100 incidents were recorded:
* three warnings, one review of a license and one closure of a premise;
* unauthorised licensable activities (10 offences);
* allowing disorderly conduct on licensed premises (four offences);
* sale of alcohol to a person who is drunk (53 offences);
* obtaining alcohol for a person who is drunk (one offence);
* failure to leave licensed premises (four offences);
* sale of alcohol to children (eight offences);
* purchase of alcohol by or on behalf of children (two offences); and
* consumption of alcohol by children (four offences).
Source: Home Office









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