Only 7.6 per cent of the 57,000 shoplifting offences or one in every 13 of the crimes reported to the Met last year resulted in a charge or an out-of-court resolution.
Why are shoplifters not being prosecuted?
The change stems from the requirement in the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 for any shoplifting offence less than £200 to be treated as a summary offence, which should be handled through a penalty notice fine of just £70 without the thief having to turn up at magistrates.
One former Scotland Yard detective said that the downgrade had given a green light to police to
abandon prosecutions and investigations into such thefts, which could tie up an officer for six to eight hours when they could be tackling more serious crime.
He said in 2021: "The government has effectively decriminalised shoplifting. Provided a thief stays below the £200 threshold, they are not going to be arrested. Police won't be called and the worst they get is a fixed penalty of £70 and they are still in profit with £130."
Retailers are now calling on the government to outlaw attacks on retail workers specifically.
BRC chief executive Dickinson added: "It's time the government put their words into action. We need to see a standalone offence for assaulting or abusing a retail worker, as exists in Scotland.
"We need government to stand with the millions of retail workers who kept us safe and fed during the pandemic – and support them, as those workers supported us."
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/new-figures-reveal-huge-jump-in-uk-shoplifting-crimes-103008078.html#:~:text=Only 7.6 per cent of,out-of-court resolution.