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NLJ this week: Stop & search in the Public Order Bill

18 November 2022
Issue: 8003 / Categories: Legal News , Public , Criminal
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The controversial Public Order Bill significantly broadens stop and search powers, writes Neil Parpworth, of Leicester De Montfort Law School, in this week’s NLJ

Clause 10 adds seven protest-related offences. Clause 11 gives the police ‘suspicionless’ stop and search powers and makes obstruction of suspicionless stop and search a summary offence punishable by up to 51 weeks in prison.

Parpworth examines the provisions of this controversial Bill, highlighting shortcomings in safeguards. He notes: ‘Home Office data on stop and searches carried out by police forces in England and Wales has consistently shown a number of things over many years, including that the police often fail to find what they were looking for, and that Black citizens are far more likely to be stopped and searched than white citizens.’ 

Read the full article here.

Issue: 8003 / Categories: Legal News , Public , Criminal
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