Labour to let 12k of UK’s most prolific shoplifters roam free | UK | News


David Lammy gives thumbs up in downing street

The Justice Minister, David Lammy, wants to tackle overcrowding in prisons (Image: Getty)

Labour is to allow 12,000 of the UK’s most prolific shoplifters to roam free as the Government scraps most prison sentences of less than one year. Figures show that 98% of shoplifters currently inside would meet the criteria for โ€œcommunity punishmentsโ€ under the Sentencing Act, which was passed last year.

Nearly 60% prolific thieves, individuals that have at least 15 previous convictions, avoided jail in 2024, Ministry of Justice data suggests. This is the largest proportion since the department’s records began more than 10 years ago.

Of those jailed in the year to September 2025, 76% were jailed for three months or less. Only 1.7% (231 out of 12,734 shoplifters sentenced to prison) were sentenced for a year or more. Overall, shoplifting offences increased in England and Wales in the year to September, but remained slightly below record levels seen in the 12 months to March 2025, the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures available show.

READ MORE: ‘Courts must do more in fight against shoplifting blighting our high streets’

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Man being handcuffed

Prolific thieves are avoiding jail (Image: Getty)

There were 519,381 shoplifting offences in the year to September 2025, up 5% from 492,660 the previous year.

A total of 530,439 offences were recorded in the year to March 2025.

Conservative Shadow Chancellor, Chris Philp, told The Telegraph there will be “no effective punishment” for shoplifters, and the crime will “escalate even further” as a result.

“This is a shopliftersโ€™ charter and means shop theft will snowball out of control,” he added.

Marks and Spencerโ€™s retail director, Thinus Keeve, claimed earlier this week its customer-facing staff were being subjected to violence and abuse every day, and called for the Government and the Mayor of London, Sir Sadiq Khan, to crack down on crime.

He spoke out after unrest earlier this week involving one of the retail giantโ€™s stores in Clapham, south London, which saw hundreds of youths swarm high street shops as part of an online trend.

An MoJ said: โ€œThis Government inherited a prison system on the brink of collapse. The suspension of short sentences is part of wider, urgent reform to ensure our prison system isnโ€™t pushed to the brink of collapse ever again and dangerous criminals are kept off our streets.

โ€œIt would be wrong to suggest every short sentence for shoplifting will be suspended โ€“ particularly in the case of reoffenders. However, evidence shows that community orders and suspended sentences act as a more successful deterrent to reoffending than prison time.

โ€œThis Government is committed to punishment that works as we tackle recurring shoplifting which blights our communities and high streets. We are delivering one of the biggest expansions of tagging in British history โ€“ backed by ยฃ100 million in funding โ€“ which will target shoplifters among other offenders.โ€

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