'Just seven years ago I was able to examine up to eight crimes within a 10-hour shift, today it takes me the entire shift to examine one'
'Just seven years ago I was able to examine up to eight crimes within a 10-hour shift, today it takes me the entire shift to examine one'
One expert claims the average time for police to examine a mobile phone for evidence is currently up to eight months and the delays are contributing to the backlog of cases waiting to be heard which is more than 65,000 in the Crown courts. Forces are having to spend large amounts of money that hasn’t been accounted for on recruiting for job roles such as “quality manager”, and redeploying staff away from investigations to compliance work, it is claimed.the cost for new “quality assurance” jobs in a single department at the country’s largest force was already more than £500,000.“In principle, I totally agree with improving regulation but none of this was costed in when it was put before Parliament.
“We currently have a CSI who is being used part time to control and rotate stock and clean down our stock stores instead of examining scenes.”, with more than 2.1 million going undetected between 2022-23 according to the latest Home Office figures for England and Wales, the equivalent of 39 per cent of all offences recorded.
“Just seven years ago I was able to examine up to eight volume crimes within a 10-hour shift,” they told“Volume crime is the most commonly committed, the crime that most affects the members of the public. “These are theft from and theft of vehicles, all burglaries including shed, garage, homes, businesses, criminal damage.
“The problem is with the way it’s been implemented. For experts like me, the amount of time and effort it takes to prove either that you’re compliant, or that you don’t need to be compliant, it’s not worth it.
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