Online advice service launched to thwart mobile phone thieves
24 Mar 2014 01:10 PM
A new online advice
service to help people protect their mobile phone handsets from thieves has
gone live today (Monday 24 March).
Advice has been published on Police.uk with the support of major phone
manufacturers Apple, Blackberry, LG, Samsung, Sony, Nokia and Windows
Phones.
The service encourages the
public to make more use of their phone’s security features, including
innovations such as tracking, wiping data from or locking stolen handsets
remotely using another internet-enabled device. The service also provides links
to information on each manufacturer’s security features, including how to
switch them on.
There are also tips on avoiding
mobile phone theft in the first place, such as taking extra care to keep
handsets secure in busy locations and never leaving a mobile phone
unattended.
In 2012/13 there were 742,000
victims of mobile phone theft in England and Wales. 16 to 24-year-olds are the
most likely age group to be the target of ‘theft from the person’
offences.
Crime Prevention Minister Norman
Baker has held a series of meetings with leaders in the mobile phone
manufacturing industry to discuss what more can be done to tackle mobile phone
theft.
Mobile phone
theft
Crime Prevention Minister Norman
Baker said:
Crime is down more than 10% but
theft from the person has gone up, bucking the overall trend. It is clear much
of this is generated by the theft of mobile phones, iPads and the like. I have
challenged the industry to do more to make such thefts unattractive, for
example by making it easier to immobilise stolen devices and I am pleased to
see that we are now making progress.
One part of this is the online
advice service which is a vital new tool that will help people protect their
handsets and make would-be thieves think twice.
Mobile phone technology is
changing all the time and we need innovative solutions to ensure we get ahead
of criminals.
The UK is a world leader in
responding to mobile phone crime, with the industry and the police already
working together to block stolen phones within 48 hours – stopping them
being re-used in this country and making them less valuable.