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December 6, 2005: Cocaine Use Rising, LSD Use Declines A new Home Office Statistical Bulletin with data on known drug offences and offenders in England and Wales in 2004 has just been published. The bulletin, entitled 'Drug Offenders in England and Wales 2004', Lungowe Mwenda, provides information on police cautions, court proceedings and HM Revenue and Customs compounding (where payment is made of a compound settlement in lieu of prosecution for minor cannabis possession offences) for drug offences. There were 105,570 drug offences recorded in England and Wales in 2004. This represents a 21% fall from the 133,970 offences recorded in 2003. Drugs are divided into three classes (A, B and C) according to their harmfulness. Class A offences rose by 2% to 36,350. There were 7,260 class B offences and 59,050 class C offences in 2004. Cannabis was re-classified from being a class B to a class C drug. in January 2004, rendering most cannabis possession non-arrestable. Most drug offenders are male; in 2004, only12% of drug offenders were female. The number of drug offenders sentenced at court during 2003 and 2004 was 73,180 and 55,880 respectively, a fall of 24%. This is due to a general decrease across most drug types, including: heroin (-5%); LSD (-12%); methadone (-7%); and cannabis (-39%). There were 33,470 cautions given for drug offences in 2004, a 28% fall from 2003. Cocaine use is growing quickly, while LSD use is declining.
Cocaine possession offenders made up 8% of all drug offenders in 2004, with
cocaine dealers making up an additional 2%. 2% of known drugs offenders were
dealt with for cocaine offences in 1994 years ago, rising to 10% in 2004
(8,070). Crack offenders have been reported separately from cocaine since 1994
when there were 370 crack offenders. There are now 2,440 crack offenders in 2004
(3% of all drugs offenders). In 1994, LSD accounted for 2% of all drug offenders
(1,660 offenders) but the number has shrunk under 1% in 2004 (130 offenders).
Cautions (44%) were the most common disposal used for possession offences in 2004. Dealing offences accounted for 14% of all drug offenders in 2004. The number of dealing offenders rose 2% in 2004 to 10,800 from 10,630 in 2003. While offences involving possession tend to be committed by those under the age of 25 (53%), offences involving tend to be committed by people aged over 25 (60%). Unlawful production/import/export offences committed by people aged 30 or over (61%). The most commonly used disposal for convicted dealing offenders in 2004 was immediate custody (61%). Community sentences were used in 17% of cases. |
November 28, 2008: Call To End Orange Clothes For Community Payback November 25, 2008: Legislation Protects Victims Of Forced Marriage November 24, 2008: Tasers For Police November 11, 2008: Independent Review Alleges Prison Service Incompetence October 17, 2008: Sanctions For Reckless Traders, Says Napo October 15, 2008: Jobs Axed in Probation, Prisons, And Courts October 3, 2008: IPCC On Double Fatal Shooting October 2, 2008: Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair Resigns October 1, 2008: New Met Police e-crime Unit September 25, 2008: ID Cards Update September 22, 2008: New Prostitution Rules Supporting Trafficked Women September 19, 2008: Mandatory Polygraph Tests for Sex Offenders September 12, 2008: Prison Transfer With Vietnam Agreed September 4, 2008: Reoffending Rates: New Figures September 1, 2008: Tougher Community Work For Offenders August 26, 2008. Summary Justice Widening Criminal Justice Net August 21, 2008: Tightening Controls For Sex Offenders July 15, 2008: Explaining The Rise In Prison Numbers
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