The rankings, which are based on official police data, showed that the proportion of sexual and violent crimes where the Metropolitan Police charged a suspect was 5% as of August 2020. Five years earlier, that figure apparently stood at 14%.
At the national level, police forces now solve about 9% - fewer than one in 10 - of sexual and violent offence cases. According to the new analysis by Poliscope, that number was 19% - roughly one in five - in 2016. A study published by the group in May projected sex and violent crimes to rise by 13% by 2022 and reach 20% by 2023 compared to figures from 2019.
London's Victims' Commissioner Claire Waxman told The Telegraph:
"Too many rape victims in London are being failed and we need to see an urgent overhaul of the criminal justice system's approach to rape, from the police through to prosecution and courts. Without drastic changes, we won't be able to restore the trust and confidence of survivors that they will be able to get justice."Waxman also criticised the current "disproportionate focus placed on discrediting a victim and their case," while calling for police forces to shift towards an "offender-centric" approach to investigations.















Comment: When is law enforcement a farce? When the police force is as complicit in rape crimes as those arrested.