Sunday, January 19, 2025

FIRST WITH SECURITY NEWS

More hot spot policing trials in Cape Town following Tafelsig’s success

Published on

Violent crime in Tafelsig in the Cape Town suburb of Mitchell’s Plain dropped by 20% in SA’s first hot spot policing trial.

The Institute for Security Studies (ISS), which helped design and facilitate the trial in an area notorious for gangs and violent drug trade, said the decline proved that astutely planned visible law enforcement, in the right place at the right time, can discourage potential offenders and reduce opportunities for crime.

“Hot spot policing involves the strategic use of data to direct police resources to where they have the most impact. It is widely practiced, but seldom properly evaluated.”

“An evidence-based intervention was piloted in Tafelsig in the Cape Town suburb of Mitchell’s Plain. Police recorded 125 murders in Mitchell’s Plain over 12 months in the 2022/23 reporting period used by the South African Police Service (SAPS). That amounts to a rate of about 60 murders per 100 000 people – much higher than the national average of 45,” ISS said.

For just over two months last year, police carried out brief, frequent and unpredictable patrols in a small high-crime part of Tafelsig, concentrating on the days and times when crime was most likely.

“This approach was based on international evidence showing that crime reduces when police first patrol an area, but the impact diminishes if patrols become predictable or less frequent. Optimal effectiveness requires precise time-limited patrols, making it possible to cover more locations,” ISS said.

Cape Town District police commissioner Maj Gen Vincent Beaton said the ISS helped the police to try something new and measure its impact.

“We worked with ISS experts to develop operational plans based on better use of crime data and to target our resources more strategically. The overall effect was to make communities safer.”

ISS said the proven effect of the intervention has prompted further trials.

“This approach to hot spot policing will now be rolled out at four more high-crime police stations in Cape Town to assess if the results can be repeated and scaled up. Also involved in developing and implementing the pilot were the City of Cape Town’s Safety and Security Directorate and the Western Cape Province’s Department of Police Oversight and Community Safety.”

“This was the first instance in South Africa where we could quantify the impact of a policing intervention with scientific rigour, setting a new standard for evidence-based law enforcement,” said Anine Kriegler, senior researcher on justice and violence prevention at the ISS.

She said hot spot policing drives more efficient data-driven deployment that leaves a lingering deterrent even after the police move on. This is much more effective than random patrols based on convenience and police habits. It also boosts SAPS morale by showing officers that what they are doing is working.”

The ISS has shared lessons from the trial with SAPS station commanders, visible policing units, crime analysts and community safety specialists.

MOST READ

SITE SPONSORS

More like this

Rising Tide of Violence Against South African Municipal Officials and Councillors

South Africa continues to grapple with a troubling trend of violence targeting municipal officials...

SAPS upping crime fighting skills – Mchunu

South African policemen and women, according to Police Minister Senzo Mchunu, are and will...

Precision policing: a vital element of reducing firearm crime

A safer South Africa is only possible with less gun crime. Achieving that requires...