Extra safeguarding brought in after death of child caught dealing drugs in Dorset

The boy was found killed in London

Author: Trevor Bevins, Local Democracy ReporterPublished 22nd Apr 2021
Last updated 22nd Apr 2021

Youngsters caught in Dorset as part of county lines drug dealing are being returned to their home area with the utmost care to avoid them coming to harm.

Dorset councillors heard that to return them without appropriate measures in place could put them at risk of repercussions, often violent, from the gangs which sent them.

They were told there has been a serious case review involving a child caught in the Bournemouth area for drug dealing who was later killed in London, although his Dorset connection was not proven to be directly related to his death.

The Dorset Council people and health scrutiny committee heard this week (Tuesday) that if a child, some as young as 14, had been sent to Dorset with a cache of drugs and a weapon, and then returned without the drugs, or money from the sale, they could be at significant risk of violence or further exploitation.

Committee members were told that protocols were in place, working with other social services departments, police and youth justice workers, to ensure that the risks of those being returned to other areas were minimised.

The comments were made during a debate on the Dorset annual Youth Justice service report which showed a reduction, locally, in the number of young people entering the criminal justice system.

Youth Justice service manager David Webb

The annual report outlined a reduction across all of Dorset in 10-17 year-olds entering the justice system of 251 per 100,000 population, compared to 344 the year before. The meeting heard that evidence suggests there has been a further decline since the last national figures were collated.

The meeting also heard that there has been no Dorset young people receiving a custodial sentence from the courts in the year to March 2021.

Youth Justice service manager David Webb said that his team had shifted the focus of their work with children at risk to intervene before they got to the stage of coming to the attention of the police. He said the service is also undertaking more restorative justice work where offenders make reparations to the victims of their crimes without going to court, or getting a criminal record provided they agree to the negotiated agreement.

Mr Webb said that the majority of youngsters which came into contact with the service had speech and language needs and many had suffered trauma in their earlier lives which had affected their development. He told the committee that staff were increasingly aware of that link putting more of a emphasis on it in the department’s work.

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