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Taking use of Taser-like weapons alone, black people are seven times more likely to have this tactic used against them than white people. Photograph: Stephen Hyde/Alamy
Taking use of Taser-like weapons alone, black people are seven times more likely to have this tactic used against them than white people. Photograph: Stephen Hyde/Alamy

Black people five times more likely to have force used on them by police

This article is more than 3 years old

Figures for England and Wales show nearly one in three incidents involving tactics such as stun guns targeted BAME person

Black people are five times more likely to have force used against them by police in England and Wales than white people, official figures show.

Taking use of Taser-like weapons alone, black people are seven times more likely to have this tactic used against them than white people, although this includes “non-discharge” incidents when the electric-shock devices are drawn but not fired.

Other use-of-force tactics covered by the Home Office figures include handcuffing, ground restraint, use of batons and firearms.

The figures will add weight to accusations that black people are not treated equally by police, which have been at the heart of global protests this summer.

Sam Grant, head of policy and campaigns at Liberty, said: “These statistics are the latest evidence, as if it were needed, that emphasising aggressive and confrontational policing tactics will only worsen the racist over-policing of people of colour. It’s clear that a new approach is needed to keep communities safe which doesn’t rely on yet more coercive policing.”

The figures, covering the year to March 2020, exclude those from the biggest force in England and Wales, the Metropolitan police, which are pulled out separately.

Black people were four times more likely to have force used against them by Met police officers than white people, and five times more likely to have Taser-like devices used against them by the force.

Across England and Wales, including the Met police, nearly one in three incidents involving use of force – which can involve multiple use-of-force tactics recorded per incident – targeted people from black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) backgrounds. BAME people account for 15.5% of the population in England, according to 2016 figures.

There were 492,000 recorded incidents where a police officer reported the use of force on an individual in England and Wales in the year to March, involving 715,000 use-of-force tactics. Use-of-force incidents can involve multiple officers, each reporting their use of force.

The Police Federation of England and Wales, which represents rank and file officers, said the rise must be set in the context of the number of assaults on police officers in the same period, of which 30,679 were recorded.

The national vice-chair, Ché Donald, said: “I make no apology for my colleagues doing the best they can to keep the public, themselves and colleagues safe. The vast majority of people appreciate and understand what we do.”

The total number of incidents are up 14% on the previous year, while the total use of force tactics is up 13%.

Restraint tactics such as handcuffing were the most common type of force used, with 385,000 incidents, or 78% of the total.

The most common reason given by officers for use of force was to protect themselves, which counted for 335,000 incidents( 68%).

The figures show that 83% of people who had force used against them were men, and 54% were aged between 18 and 34. Officers recorded 81% of people subjected to force as having no physical or mental health condition.

Earlier this year, official figures revealed that black people were nine times more likely to be stopped and searched by police than white people in England and Wales.

The National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for self defence and restraint, deputy assistant commissioner Matt Twist, said: “Officers have thousands of interactions with the public across the country every day, and force is rarely used in the vast majority of those. When it is necessary to use force – for example, when someone poses an immediate danger to others or themselves - it is used proportionately and lawfully.”

More on this story

More on this story

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  • 'They all let him down': Kevin Clarke's family condemn Met police's actions

  • Parents of man who died after police restraint challenge delay over Seni's law

  • MoJ challenged to release details of child restraint in prisons

  • Neglect contributed to death after restraint by police, inquest finds

  • Black people more likely to have force used against them by police

  • Officer who punched incapacitated suspect six times is dismissed

  • Rashan Charles: why ex-Met officer great-uncle rejects inquest verdict

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