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Faces of men who have been convicted of harm to women and girls UK News

Faces of men who have been convicted of harm to women and girls UK News

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These are some of the most dangerous criminals who have been convicted after being violent for women and girls from London.

Adam Baillie, 39 years old, who kidnapped an 11-year-old girl, kept her as a prisoner and sexually assaulted, and Louis Collins, who attacked eight women in four days in the Capital, was closed as a repression on violent crimes against women in the capital.

Joined the list of 100 people who have been convicted as part of Met the policeThe V100 program, which aims to take those with the highest risk on the streets.

The 100th person who was sentenced in January was Trevor George, 57, who violated a restriction order.

Five men who have been convicted as part of the V100 MET Police initiative for violent crimes against women and girls.
Violent criminals who were blocked: Adam Baillie (left), Kenneth Ebbah (Middle de Sus), Aaron Bennett (right right), Jason Phinn, (lower middle) and Louis Collins (image: met Police)

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Met said, in addition to the 100 convictions, 126 people were accused of 574 crimes, including rape, painful body injury (GBH), non-makeal strangulation and attempted murder.

In a The opinion piece for MetroMet Police Commissioner Mark Rowley said: “Our experience also showed us that many of these dangerous men are adept at hiding their violent offense, using coercive and controlling behavior to stop the victims.

“As a result, a significant part of our V100 strategy is to use every available path to get these predatory men behind bars.

“We have obtained the criminal prosecution for the treatment of drugs, the transport of weapons, the robbery and repeats shopping,” throwing the book “to V100 to remove them from the streets and away from the victims.

“By using data and technology, combined with several better prepared officers, we think it is possible to turn the wave.”

Is not correct

On November 25, 2024 Metro Launched this is not right, a one -year campaign to address the tireless epidemic of violence against women.

With the help of our partners in women’s help, this aims to shine a light on the pure scale of this national emergency situation.

You can find more items HereAnd if you want to share your story with us, you can send us an Email to vaw@metro.co.uk.

Read more:

During a briefing at Scotland Yard in central London, Deputy Commissioner Ben Russell said that V100 is “everything about proactivity” to “stop the injury” of women and girls.

“We do not want to wait for these men to carry out more offenses,” he said Metro.

He said that everyone on the V100 stack has been appointed as a suspect of more than one crime in the last year, but many have a “long and complex history of convictions and arrests.”

The most dangerous criminals for women and girls

These are some of the most dangerous criminals who have been closed after abusing women and girls.

Adam Baillie, 39 years old, from Springway, Harrow, was caught after kidnapping, false prison and sexual aggression of an 11 -year -old girl in Harrow in April last year. He was sentenced to life in prison last month.

36 -year -old Jason Phinn from Bournville, Birmingham, killed his mother at their home in Brixton, southern London, in November 2023.

He was found raised on drugs when he was arrested, while his 64 -year -old mother was seriously injured inside the family’s house. Now, he has been sentenced to 13 years in prison.

Louis Collins, 30 years old, without fixed home, was lifetime for rape, kidnapping and 22 other crimes in July last year.

He raped a woman in Knifepoint in a park and tried to rape another woman after she followed her home – just two of her eight victims.

He will serve 11 years and five months minimum in prison to attack eight women in Four days in London.

Kenneth Ebbah, 42, from Dellow Street, Tower Hamlets, raped two women after convinced them to let them walk at home, where he attacked women in March and November 2023. He was closed for 18 years.

Aaron Bennett, 36, from Shacklewell Road, Hackney, was one of the first people to be arrested as part of the V100 initiative, after persistently abused with two women with whom he was in a relationship, including strangulation.

Finally, it was imprisoned for five and a half in August last year, after being found guilty by GBH, non-makeal strangulation and attack of its former partners.

“We have seen the V100 closed suspects for shopping, for robbery – however we can remove them from the victims and from the streets,” he said.

Although the “vast majority” on the list are men, two women were included on the list, Russell added.

Early this month, a plaster survey, ordered for Metro throughout the year Is not correct The campaign, discovered that almost a quarter of us know a woman or a girl who was a victim of domestic abuse in the last year.

Metro launched the campaign last year as a way to shine a light on the scale of violence used against women and girls.

Inside the offenses V100

To date, 126 people 574 offenses, including rape, serious bodily injury (GBH), non-makeal strangulation and attempted murder, reveal figures from Met.

  • 155 arrests were made for a total of 1,246 offenses
  • 103 Of them refers to violence against women and girls:
  • 42 for rape18 for GBH and 17 for non-making strangulation

The epidemic of violence has been labeled as a national emergency, because the figures show that about 100 women are killed by men every year.

Until this year, at least ten women are believed to have been killed in the hands of men.

The superintendent of the detective, Angela Craggs, said that Met is trying to be “more creative”, using the tactics to hunt the most serious VAW offenders. Some examples include tactics usually observed with counter-terrorism and organized crime measures, including data analysis, to catch predators.

Deputy Deputy Police Deputy Commissioner Ben Russell, outside New Scotland Yard Building in London.
Deputy Deputy Commissioner Ben Russell said many of the men on the V100 list have a complex crime history (Image: Noora Mykkanen/Metro)

“We say tactics of Achilles’ heels, so, rather than focus on a single crime, we will analyze all the crimes we can contact with that perpetrator, so that we can take them from the street, which is our target,” she added.

The V100 scheme was launched in January 2024, after a cursed review from the police guardian, the Inspectorate of His Majesty of Constabular and Fire & Rescue services (HMICFRS), in 2022.

It was found that the force required an improvement in the way he investigated crime, protected vulnerable persons and managed and suspected criminals.

The superintendent chief of the Metropolitan Police Detective, Angela Craggs, outside New Scotland Yard.
Detective’s superintendent, Angela Craggs, explained how violent criminals are captured to women and girls (image: Noora Mykkanen/Metro)

The report came after a series of scandals to face the strength, including the conviction of former police officer Met Wayne Couzens, who abducted, raped and killed Sarah Everard in 2021 and the exhibition of misogyny and discrimination by Charing Cross Police Station officers in 2022.

The Minister for Savigarding and Violence against Women and Girls, Jess Phillips, said: “Every woman has a fundamental right to feel safe. 100 criminals condemned by the MET police mean another 100 dangerous men on our streets – a strong achievement for the Met V100 initiative.

“Offering a consistent national approach in using these data-based tools to identify and follow the most dangerous perpetrators is an essential part of our mission to reduce the violence against women and girls in a decade. We crack with our police partners to achieve this.”

Get in touch with our news team through E -mail at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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