The Gold Coast has 40 fewer cops than 12 months ago to fight a crime wave
THE Gold Coast’s drug-fuelled crime wave is being blamed on fewer cops on the beat than 12 months ago. What do you think?
Crime and Court
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THE Gold Coast’s drug-fuelled crime wave is being blamed on fewer cops on the beat than 12 months ago.
Official numbers from June this year show the Glitter Strip has 40 fewer cops with many of them shifted out from the region, State Parliament was told yesterday.
Opposition police spokesman Tim Mander told the Bulletin: “Is it any wonder robberies, break-ins and assaults have skyrocketed under Labor?
“Behind every one of these statistics is a Gold Coast resident who’s been bashed up, shaken or lost valuable possessions.
“These figures show in black and white that Annastacia Palaszczuk and Labor are soft on crime and their weak approach is putting Gold Coast families in danger.”
Coomera LNP MP Michael Crandon released the statistics in Parliament. They were rejected by Premier Palaszczuk, sparking a heated debate.
In a question directed to the Premier, Mr Crandon said the Coast district had 846 police officers compared to 886 a year ago.
He asked why the Government was “shifting cops out of the Gold Coast” when crime rates had exploded.
In the Coast police district the rates of assaults had increased by 28 per cent and robberies were up by 20 per cent, he said.
“Premier, why doesn’t the Government see the safety of my community in the Coomera electorate as a priority?,” Mr Crandon said.
Premier Palaszczuk defended the “hard work” of police to protect residents and attacked the Opposition for not releasing the crime statistics during the previous Newman Government.
“The crime statistics are a public document because my government releases them unlike those when they were in government. There were no reports because they shut it down,” she said.
“I’m advised there are more police on the Gold Coast than there have been in the past.”
Ms Palaszczuk said the Coast district from June 30 had 1100 police which included 846 full-time officers along with those attached to specialist agencies such as Taskforce Maxima and forensics.
“So you’re cherry picking statistics, you’re not adding them together. It’s about time you got your facts correct,” she said.
The Gold Coast Bulletin this month, having run the Thin Grim Line series, revealed the Coast will only get five new young police recruits before Christmas.
The 2016-17 annual statistical review released by the Queensland Police Service confirmed massive increases in violent offences and fall-off in drug arrests and good order offences.