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Publication — Force management statement —
A force management statement is a self-assessment that chief constables (and London equivalents) prepare and submit to HMICFRS each year.
Publication — Serious and organised crime —
In January 2024, the then Home Secretary commissioned us to inspect how effectively the police and National Crime Agency tackle organised immigration crime in England and Wales.
News article —
Law enforcement agencies have missed opportunities to investigate organised immigration crime, with intelligence gathering neither being effective nor robust enough.
Publication — PEEL —
PEEL is HMICFRS’s assessment of police forces in England and Wales. PEEL stands for police effectiveness, efficiency, and legitimacy. This report sets out the findings for Lincolnshire Police.
News article —
There are serious concerns about the performance of Lincolnshire Police, particularly in how it investigates crime and how quickly it responds to incidents.
Publication — Disorder, Thematic inspection —
In July and August 2024, widespread unrest and violent disorder broke out in many towns and cities across the UK. On 6 September 2024, the Home Secretary commissioned us to carry out a rapid review into the policing response to the disorder. This is our Tranche 2 report.
News article —
Police need to be better prepared to manage the risks online content poses to the public, and must prioritise intelligence on disorder.
News article —
We have published our assessment framework for our police effectiveness, efficiency and legitimacy (PEEL) programme for the 2025-2027 cycle.
Publication — Effectiveness, Efficiency, Legitimacy, PEEL, PEEL methodology —
This is our assessment framework for our police effectiveness, efficiency and legitimacy (PEEL) programme for 2025-2027. We assess each police force in England and Wales, giving graded judgments across several core questions set out in this framework.
News article —
Ineffective police investigation processes are not always putting the victim first, with forces often focusing on quantity rather than quality when measuring support for victims.