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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Jon Ungoed-Thomas

Police in England and Wales to screen suspects for signs gambling addiction is driving crime

A ball spinning on a roulette wheel
Police chiefs say gambling addiction needs to be taken more seriously in the criminal justice system. Photograph: KTSDesign/Science Photo Library/Getty Images

Criminal suspects will be routinely screened for gambling addiction by a number of police forces across England and Wales because of growing concerns that high-stakes betting is fuelling crime in a similar way to drugs and alcohol.

Ten police forces are now routinely questioning suspects in custody over their gambling habits, in addition to questions over alcohol and drug abuse. The Observer has confirmed that another seven forces are drawing up plans to implement similar policies in 2023.

Police and crime commissioners are also calling for better safeguards to prevent the proceeds of crime being used for gambling. In a recent case, Martin Sargeant, a former head of operations at the Church of England, defrauded the church of more than £5.2m and staked millions of pounds on online fruit machines while being offered VIP status, bonuses, food hampers and luxury watches by betting firms.

A government white paper on gambling which has been repeatedly delayed is due to be published this year. It is examining whether tighter requirements for operators are required to protect customers, including affordability checks and more interventions to prevent problem gambling.

Joy Allen, the police and crime commissioner for Durham and joint lead for addictions and substance misuse at the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, said the association would like to see screening carried out by all police forces.

“This is a real opportunity for a better understanding of the causes of crime and early treatment,” she said. “We need to raise awareness that this is a disorder like alcohol and drugs and it should be looked at in the same way.”

The government has estimated the annual cost of crimes linked to alcohol at £11bn and class A drug-related crimes at £13.9bn, but there is limited data on the cost of crime linked to gambling.

The first pilot to screen suspects for gambling addiction was launched by Cheshire police in 2017. Under the project, suspects were questioned about their betting habits and problem gamblers were offered suitable treatment: 13% of those surveyed were at some risk of a gambling problem, according to the initial results.

Matt Burton, former assistant chief constable of Cheshire police, who oversaw the pilot now taken up by nine other forces, said gambling addiction needed to be taken more seriously in the criminal justice system, with more training to spot problem gamblers. “This is an addiction that is really hard to escape from and it’s so accessible,” he said.

In June 2019, the Howard League for Penal Reform launched its commission on crime and gambling related harms, examining the links between the two. It found “a lack of understanding of gambling addiction” across the criminal justice system. Witnesses who gave evidence to the commission described “a near total lack of support available for gambling addiction in prison”.

Andrew Neilson, director of campaigns at the charity, said: “We have a criminal justice system which has interventions which target alcohol and drug-related crime, but there is limited focus on gambling.”

Freedom of information requests by the charity found more than 2,800 crimes linked to gambling between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2020. These included fraud, theft, burglary and violent crime, but are only a proportion of the total number of crimes linked to problem gambling.

Betting firms are under pressure from the Gambling Commission, the regulator, to improve their procedures to identify money-laundering, irresponsible gambling or the proceeds of crime. The commission has taken action against several firms over failures, including a regulatory settlement in August 2022 of £17m with the gambling giant Entain over “unacceptable” anti-money laundering and safer gambling failures.

Matt Zarb-Cousin, director of the campaign group Clean Up Gambling, said there had been repeated failures by the industry to halt betting sprees linked to illicit funds and problem gambling.

He said: “These failures illustrate why affordability cannot be entrusted to the discretion of gambling firms which derive the vast majority of their profits from those losing more than they can afford.”

Police Scotland also started a six-month pilot in October in two areas of the west of Scotland to train officers to recognise gambling addiction and, where appropriate, to screen people in custody.

Chief constable Steve Jupp, the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for serious and organised crime, said: “Gambling addiction has a devastating effect on those with the condition and their families. We will continue working closely with partners to change perceptions on gambling so that it is viewed in line with other addictions.”

A government spokesperson said new support services were being provided for gambling addicts. “We understand the costs of gambling addiction to society, which is why we are building specialist NHS gambling addiction treatment clinics across the country as part of our £2.3bn expansion of mental health services.”

The Betting and Gaming Council said its members had introduced a package of safer betting measures, including the removal of features from some games which encourage problematic play. The council said the UK sector was the “best regulated in the world” with problem gambling rates of 0.3% among the lowest in Europe.

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