In my Spectator column this week I’ve written about Kemi Badenoch’s announcement that she’s committed to scrapping the practice of recording ‘non-crime hate incidents’, which is extremely welcome. Here’s how it begins:
Could the end of non-crime hate incidents (NCHIs) be in sight? As the head of the Free Speech Union, I’ve been campaigning for their abolition for five years and there was a breakthrough this week with the Conservatives unveiling a plan to scrap them. Chris Philp, the Shadow Home Secretary, is going to table an amendment to Labour’s Crime and Policing Bill that would make it illegal in almost all circumstances for the police to collect or retain personal data relating to hate incidents where no laws have been broken.
For those unfamiliar with this Orwellian concept, an NCHI is a record the police make when someone accuses you of a ‘hate crime’ and they can find no evidence a crime has been committed. That sounds odd. Why would the police bother to record ‘non-crimes’ when there are so many actual crimes they could investigate? It’s even odder when you consider some of the reports the police have followed up, such as the man in Bedfordshire who ended up with an NCHI recorded against him after his neighbour told the police he started whistling the theme tune to Bob the Builder whenever he saw him.
If such incidents were a rarity, perhaps it wouldn’t matter. But according to Freedom of Information requests submitted by the Telegraph, 119,934 were recorded between 2014 and 2019, an average of 65 a day. A statutory code of practice was issued in 2023 designed to get the police to use more common sense when it comes to NCHIs, but data obtained by the Free Speech Union show the new guidance is being ignored. In some areas, the number being recorded has actually gone up since 2023.
So what, you might think. Aren’t NCHIs just a way for the police to fob off oversensitive complainants, like the neighbour in Bedfordshire? “Don’t worry, sir. We’ve notified the gentleman that we’ve recorded his vexatious whistling as a non-crime hate incident. If you’d like to contact our victim support service, the details are on our website.” No such luck. In fact, an NCHI can show up on your criminal record if you apply for a job that requires you to have an enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) check. That means if you want to work as a teacher or volunteer with the Samaritans, you might not be able to because you’ve committed a ‘non-crime’. When they’re recorded against children, they don’t get deleted from their criminal records when they reach the age of 18, unlike cautions for actual crimes.
Even the police have concluded that meticulously logging this data is a waste of time. The origins of NCHIs are quite murky, but had something to do with the College of Policing wanting to shield the police from accusations of not doing enough to tackle hate crime in the wake of the Macpherson Report. Fear not, was the message – henceforth, we will take every report of a hate crime seriously and if we conclude no crime has been committed we will record the episode as an NCHI so we can gather intelligence that will help us form a picture of where community tensions are rising and contain them before they erupt into actual criminality.
This ‘intelligence’ argument is often wheeled out by defenders of NCHIs, but the police don’t appear to believe it themselves, since they rarely analyse the data. According to FoI requests submitted to police forces by the Telegraph, no analysis of this ‘intelligence’ is undertaken by the Met, Greater Manchester or West Midlands forces. Little wonder that a report by Andy Cooke, His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary, concluded last year that far too many NCHIs are being recorded, often simply involving ‘hurt feelings’. “The police are not the thought police,” he said.
Worth reading in full.
Stop Press: The Free Speech Union has created a template email that you can send to your MP, urging him or her to vote for the Opposition’s amendment. Please do fill out the form. It only takes a couple of minutes. This is a golden opportunity to rid ourselves of this scourge and we should seize it with both hands. Click here for more.
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‘Far too many NCHIs are recorded’. How many is too many?
‘The police are not the thought police’. Are they the hurt feelings police?
NCHIs could be dismissed as a communications strategy if they had no serious effect on the person recorded.
And no, I’m not impressed by Kemi Badenuff on the strength of some ‘vow’. Just as I’m not by Sir K’s home secretary’s meaningless stats on foreign criminals awaiting deportation to Mars.
Non-crime, non-hate, non-pandemic, non-transgender, non-racism, non-phobia, non-climate, non-pollution, non-crisis, non-economy, non-microagression, etc, etc, etc…
…An endless list of non-events, non-issues and non-news obsessed over by the urban political, media, academician and chattering classes, and used to justify in perpetuity Telling Other People What To Do.
And yet the police are not interested in the non-paying for your shopping…
I wonder what the fate of this guy was…What he needed was some mates with him. Strength in numbers. I think, unless something’s been edited out, his only ‘non-crime’ was being a lone counter-protester to a load of terrorist-supporting Jew-haters. And a white, male patriot
”UK man arrested for shouting “Come on England” in England.”
https://x.com/TaraBull808/status/1913017109728338406
What about the gym who filmed it all?
Doesn’t look kosher to me.
Non Crime Hate Incidents to be replaced by Non Crime Government Criticism Incidents?
[satire]
Don’t we have a Right not to commit a crime?
Campaign for Non-Criminals!
I didn’t realize that our Fearless Leader Lord Toby had been campaigning against this for the past FIVE YEARS as Founder of the Free Speech Union, long before others now jumping on the bandwagon. Well done to him!
Letter sent.
The police cannot be ‘judge and jury’ which is why this foolish legislation has been incanted. The thin end is to open up a president for the police to convict without reference to any further due process (cutting out the messy judiciary involvement in the process).