Greenwich authorities determined to fight back against mobile phone thefts
Police and the council are liaising to crack down on mobile phone thefts in Greenwich.
Thefts have been on the rise and a determination to fight the trend has led to multiple serial phone thieves being stopped in their tracks over the past couple of months, according to the local authority.
In the past year, there have been 1,432 thefts and robberies involving a mobile phone in the area.
To tackle the problem, and to ensure that everyone in Greenwich is safer and feels safer, the council has been working with the Met, which has increased patrols in high crime areas around Greenwich University and the Cutty Sark.
The council looked at CCTV coverage, lighting in those areas, visitor flow and from which directions perpetrators arrived and left the area. This information was fed back to the police to help with their investigations.
The council, in collaboration with the Met, also recently ran an awareness campaign with chalk stencils which said ‘Don’t look at this. look out for thieves instead,’ displayed around Greenwich town centre in crime hotspots.
A town hall spokesman said: “At recent community engagement events, we received successful feedback on the campaign. Residents said that it made them more aware of their surroundings when out.”
The council has organised multiple community engagement events at the Cutty Sark, sharing information about bike and phone theft prevention with residents, visitors and tourists.
There have been a spate of arrests for phone theft in the borough. Five men, aged between 20 and 50, were arrested last month after a hoard of stolen mobile phones were found at a property in Brockley following thefts across Greenwich, Lewisham and Southwark.
During the search, police officers discovered multiple bags containing hundreds of phones wrapped in foil. Police officers believe that many of the seized phones belong to students or visiting tourists.
In another case, two teenagers, aged 14 and 15, were arrested after a spree of mobile phone thefts were reported around Greenwich Park and the O2 Arena.
The criminals snatched phones from people’s hands while they were riding on e-bikes. Officers quickly attended the scene and searched the area, recovering seven phones, three of which have already been returned to their owners.
Councillor Ann-Marie Cousins, cabinet member for community safety and enforcement, said: “Phone theft is unfortunately on the rise, but our council officers and the police are working together to locate and arrest perpetrators across the borough.
“Arrests will hopefully send out a message to thieves that they will not be able to get away with it and will be prosecuted.”
Pictured top: A pavement warning sign in Greenwich (Picture: Greenwich council)