Hampshire Constabulary getting extra money to tackle violent crime
It's one of 18 forces across England and Wales putting officers in so called crime 'hotspots'
The scheme, which has been piloted in Southend in Essex, is now being extended to the Hampshire police force.
The Home Office is giving 18 police forces a share of an additional ÂŁ4.12 million to increase hotspot policing in towns and cities blighted by violent crime.
When Essex Police ran the scheme, it found that putting officers on 15-minute-long uniformed patrols in crime hotspots, at targeted times, helped cut violent crime.
Detective Chief Inspector Lewis Basford, of Essex Police, said officers targeted 20 hotspots, each of 150 metres by 150 metres, with short, high-visibility patrols during a pilot in Southend last year.
The tactic resulted in a 73.5% drop in violent crime and 31.9% fall in street crime on days when patrols visited, compared with days they did not.
DCI Basford, who designed the so-called 'hotspot policing' as part of his Masters degree in criminology from Cambridge University, said:
"This is about putting a police officer in an area for the shortest amount of time for the highest residual benefit on crime."
"We're getting the presence of the police, we're giving back to the public a visible police presence, but we're doing it at sporadic times, the right times, the right place, driven by data... driven by the inconsistencies of when we're there."
He said that some days officers may attend at 2pm, the next day may be at 6pm.
During the pilot, police officers patrolled one location for three days in a row. They found the effect lasted for a further three days afterwards. Crime rose on the fourth day without a patrol.
Other forces getting funding for the scheme include: Metropolitan Police, West Midlands, Greater Manchester, Merseyside, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Northumbria, Thames Valley, Lancashire, Essex, Avon and Somerset, Kent, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Bedfordshire, Sussex, and South Wales.
Mr Basford said funding would help deploy officers to hotspot policing, pay for environmental changes such as CCTV cameras and cutting back foliage, and help with outreach schemes.
Policing Minister Kit Malthouse said:
"One of the chief missions I've been set by the Prime Minister is to get violence down and particularly violence in the public realm."
"This kind of data-driven scientific hotspot policing is showing fantastic results in dealing with that problem so we're investing in it across 18 areas of the country that are most plagued by this kind of violence and hopefully we'll see significant falls over the months to come."
"Here in Southend, they're proving that this smart approach to hotspot policing, done consistently, can have a massive impact, but we want to see that across the rest of the country."
He said the extra funding is from ÂŁ28 million won in the spending review last year to combat violence.
Mr Malthouse said the drive to recruit 20,000 extra police officers by 2023 is 'ahead of schedule':
"We're just touching 10,000 police officers, almost halfway, about six to eight months ahead of where we should be, which is great news,"
"We've got a lot more to go but the pipeline of applicants is looking really strong."