CRIME is at the lowest level recorded in Scotland by police for a 12-month period since 1974, according to statistics published on Tuesday.
The latest figures show there was a 5% fall in police-recorded crime for the year ending June 2022 compared to the same period last year.
This was primarily driven by a reduction in Coronavirus restrictions crimes.
However, the statistics – which cover the period year ending June 2022 and the previous four years – show that recorded crime is 5% lower than before the pandemic in the year ending June 2018 with a total fall of 43% since 2006-07.
Justice Secretary Keith Brown said: “We know that Scotland continues to be a safe place to live, where the vast majority of people do not experience crime.
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“Every year, there are thousands fewer victims in Scotland than there were 15 years ago.
“But there is more to be done. Continuing to reduce crime and the harm it causes both individuals and our society as a whole is central to our ambitious vision to reform our justice system.”
The overall reduction in recorded crime is reflected in the Scottish Crime & Justice Survey for 2019-20, published in March 2021, which shows that one in eight (11.9%) adults were victims of crime in 2019-20.
This is significantly less than the one in five who were victims of crime for the period 2008-09 (20.4%).
Brown continued: “Where crime does occur we have made £48 million available to organisations that support victims over the next three years, a move that underlines our absolute commitment to putting victims very firmly at the centre of the justice system.
“We have invested over £24 million to specifically target violence reduction since 2008 and will highlight our priorities to tackle violence when we publish the first ever national Violence Prevention Framework later this year.”
The stats also showed people living in Scotland are less likely to be victims of crime than in England and Wales, where 13.3% of adults were victims of crime in 2019-20.
Over the same period, from 2008-09 to 2019-20, the proportion of adults in Scotland who felt safe when walking alone after dark in their local area increased from 66% to 77%.
Brown added: “While the police cleared up more sexual crimes in 2021-22 than ever before, like many other countries Scotland continues to see growth in reported cases.
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“Multiple factors lie behind the increase including a greater willingness of victims to come forward, more historical reporting, more online offending and the impact of new legislation.
“We also remain absolutely committed to supporting our hard-working police officers as recruitment bounces back from the Covid period and the necessary closure of the Tulliallan training college to ensure the safe policing of the COP 26 climate summit.”
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