HC Deb 21 July 1953 vol 46 cc190-2W
Mr. Dobson

asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will list the clear-up rate for murder for each police authority for each of the last five years.

Mr. Hurd

In cases of homicide it is not possible in the absence of a court decision to distinguish between offences of murder, manslaughter and infanticide. The following table gives for all offences of homicide total figures for the years 1978 to 1982 because annual figures are subject to wide variation and can be misleading. This is because of the relatively small number of offences involved and because offences cleared up in one year may have been recorded in a previous year.

Offences of homicide recorded by the police, 1978–82
England and Wales
Number of offences Clear up rate
Polce force area recorded cleared up (per cent.)
Avon and Somerset 47 44 94
Bedfordshire 28 26 93
Cambridgeshire 25 24 96
Cheshire 46 45 98
Cleveland 36 36 100
Cumbria 25 24 96
Derbyshire 34 33 97
Devon and Cornwall 57 56 98

Number of offences Clear up rates
Polce force area recorded cleared up (per cent.)
Dorset 27 25 93
Durham 24 23 96
Essex 76 74 97
Gloucestershire 19 17 89
Greater Manchester 140 137 98
Hampshire 63 62 98
Hertfordshire 36 34 94
Humberside 80 75 94
Kent 58 55 95
Lancashire 79 76 96
Leicestershire 32 30 94
Lincolnshire 21 20 95
London, City of 2 1 50
Merseyside 110 108 99
Metropolitan Police District 824 728 88
Norfolk 24 24 100
Northamptonshire 43 36 84
Northumbria 62 61 98
North Yorkshire 33 33 100
Nottinghamshire 58 57 98
South Yorkshire 56 55 98
Staffordshire 36 33 92
Suffolk 12 11 92
Surrey 17 16 94
Sussex 65 63 97
Thames Valley 85 84 99
Warwickshire 26 26 100
West Mercia 26 27 *104
West Midlands 207 201 97
West Yorkshire 152 145 95
Wiltshire 18 16 89
Dyfed-Powys 17 17 100
Gwent 35 34 97
North Wales 33 33 100
South Wales 64 65 *102
England and Wales 2,958 2,790 94
* Offences cleared up in the period may have been recorded in a previous year.
† The ratio of offences cleared up in the period to offences recorded in the period.

Mr. Dobson

asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department if he will list the homicides in each district of the Metropolitan police area for each of the last five years showing the method used and whether or not it was cleared up.

Mr. Mellor

We shall reply as soon as possible.

Mr. Dobson

asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department why the total of murders, manslaughters and infanticides in 1981 given in the report of the Commisioner of Police of the Metropolis is greater than the figure for homicides for that year in his parliamentary answer to the hon. Member for Holborn and St. Pancras on 11 July, Official Report, c. 212.

Mr. Mellor

The report of the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis showed 130 offences recorded as homicide in 1981. The reply that I gave to the hon. Member for Holborn and St. Pancras (Mr. Dobson) on 11 July — [Vol. 45, c. 212] — referred to 114 offences currently recorded as homicide in 1981 in the Metropolitan police district and excluded offences which had subsequently been decided by the police or the courts not to be homicide.

Mr. Dobson

asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department in how many of the homicides committed in London in each of the last five years the victim and principal suspect were acquainted; and what was the nature of the relationship.

Mr. Mellor

The information which can be provided within the time available is given in the following table:

Offences of homicide* in the Metropolitan police district in 1981 in which the victim was acquainted with the suspect
Relationship of victim to suspect Number of offences
Son or daugher 8
Parent 1
Spouse, cohabitant or former spouse or cohabitant 17
Other family 2
Lover or former lover† 9
Friend or acquaintance 24
Other associate 4
Total 65
* As at 1 June 1983; figures are subject to revision as cases of homicide are dealt with by the police and by the courts, or as further information becomes available.
† Includes spouse's lover or lover's spouse.