Police to get 40 new live facial recognition vans and AI help in sweeping reforms

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has said that forces are “fighting crime in a digital age with analogue methods”.

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Dozens of new facial live recognition vans will be delivered to police forces under sweeping reforms announced by the home secretary.

Under Shabana Mahmood's proposals, the biggest shake-up in policing in decades, the current number of 10 vans will rise to 50, and will be overseen by a national centre on artificial intelligence (AI).

Live facial recognition vans are used to catch people on police watchlists, find missing and vulnerable individuals and deter criminal behaviour.

Ms Mahmood told the Commons some police forces are "fighting crime in a digital age with analogue methods".

A camera on top of a live facial recognition van deployed by West Yorkshire Police in Leeds. Pic: PA
Image: A camera on top of a live facial recognition van deployed by West Yorkshire Police in Leeds. Pic: PA

The move comes as part of major changes revealed in the Government's White Paper on police reforms, which seeks to also create a "British FBI", called the National Police Service (NPS), and drastically cut the number of police forces.

Ms Mahmood also announced in the Commons that all forces across England and Wales will be given AI tools to help reduce the amount of time that officers must spend behind a desk, allowing them to be on the beat more instead.

Shabana Mahmood peaks with police officers during a walkabout in Lambeth, south London. Pic: PA
Image: Shabana Mahmood peaks with police officers during a walkabout in Lambeth, south London. Pic: PA

She told MPs that the government will invest more than £140 million in new technologies to assist officers in the fight against crime.

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The Home Office has called the changes the biggest reform to policing since the police were professionalised two centuries ago.

Laying out the Police Reform White Paper, Ms Mahmood revealed that more tech experts, such as digital forensic specialists, will work within police forces to tackle fraudsters, criminal networks on the dark web and identify criminal hotspots.

"Crime has evolved - but police forces haven't," she said. "Fraudsters and serious organised crime bosses are outsmarting them.

"Under my reforms, forces will now hire more digital, cyber and forensic officers to put vile criminals behind bars."

Key police reforms at a glance

A significant reduction in the number of police forces across England and Wales from the current 43, in an effort to streamline policing. This also includes the creation of a National Police Service - dubbed the "British FBI".

A plan to establish local policing areas for each town, city or borough, and a commitment to introduce 13,000 extra neighbourhood officers by 2029.

A new "licence to practice" for all officers - to boost standards and increase trust in the police. This will be introduced alongside improvements to development opportunities for officers, with a mandated national performance management framework.

The nationwide rollout of live facial recognition technology and the use of AI by each police force to cut admin.

The NPS - which will aim to tackle serious crime - will merge the existing National Crime Agency, Counter Terror Policing, the National Police Air Service and National Roads Policing all under a single organisation.

Work to set up the NPS will start this year, but it is believed it will be finalised in the next parliament.

A review will also look at how many regional forces to cut and report back this summer, with some mergers expected to take place by the next election.

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Responding in the Commons, shadow home secretary Chris Philp said the plans don't address total police numbers, claiming they are falling under the current Labour government.

He said: "The home secretary can set targets and make announcements, but the fact is she is presiding over falling total police numbers and the public will be less safe as a result.

"To make things even worse, Labour plans to abolish prison sentences of under a year, so even the most prolific shoplifters will never face jail.

"This is a recipe for disaster cooked up by the home secretary in her previous role [as justice secretary]."

He added: "Her plan includes mandating the merger of police forces, and briefings over the weekend suggest a reduction from 43 down to 10 or 12, so a single police force might cover an area from Dover to Milton Keynes, or from Penzance to Swindon.

"Such huge forces will be remote from the communities they serve. Resources will be drawn away from villages and towns towards large cities."

Live Facial Recognition technology being deployed in Leeds by West Yorkshire Police. Pic: PA
Image: Live Facial Recognition technology being deployed in Leeds by West Yorkshire Police. Pic: PA

Ms Mahmood replied that the Conservatives slashed police numbers by 20,000, "a measure that they very hastily then tried to replace by bringing back another 20,000, but in a distorted way, which meant that 12,000 of those officers - warranted police officers - are doing desk jobs".