CHILDREN have committed hundreds of drug crimes in Cheshire in less than a decade, figures show.
Thousands of child drug offences are recorded by police every year in England and Wales – but critics of drug prohibition warn giving a youngster a criminal record can negatively impact their future.
Ministry of Justice figures show 30 cautions or convictions were handed down to youngsters in Cheshire over drug crimes in 2020-21, with the punishments among 494 recorded since records began in 2013-14.
Since then, under-18s across England and Wales have been cautioned or convicted over drugs almost 48,000 times – punishments that could have life-long consequences, according to campaigners calling for reform.
Nationally, 4,000 drug offences were committed by children during the first year of the coronavirus pandemic, despite national lockdowns and other measures contributing to a significant fall in overall crime rates.
It meant 10.3 per cent of all childhood offending in England and Wales was connected to drugs in 2020-21 – the highest proportion on record, despite a 58 per cent drop in youth-related crime since 2013-14.
Across the area covered by the Police and Crime Commissioner for Cheshire, drug crimes represented seven per cent of the total 438 proven offences that resulted in a conviction or caution for children last year.
Steve Rolles, senior policy analyst at the Transform Drug Policy Foundation, said the figures were a ‘depressing reflection on the failure of UK drug policy’ and added that nobody should be criminalised for personal drug use.
He said a prohibitionist approach had gifted the control of drug markets to organised criminals, adding: "Rather than protecting children, the war on drugs has put them in harm's way, through criminalisation, more potent and risky drugs and through the exploitation of vulnerable youth within illegal drug supply networks and county lines."
A Government spokesperson said it was combining tough enforcement with early intervention programmes and investing £200m in its Youth Endowment Fund to divert children from crime.
It is establishing an evidence base to better understand how to prevent children from taking drugs but has no plans to decriminalise drug possession, saying it would not eliminate the crime or address the harms associated with drug dependence.
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