Observer analysis reveals forces in England and Wales are leaving people at risk by rejecting Clare’s law checks on suspected abusers

Police in England and Wales are leaving people at risk of domestic abuse by refusing to release information on suspected violent partners, the Observer can reveal, with one force declining 95% of requests for checks.

Under Clare’s law – named after Clare Wood, 36, who was murdered in 2009 by her ex-boyfriend George Appleton – people have a right to ask police whether a partner or ex-partner has a history of abusive behaviour.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Dean Campbell’s late FA Cup stunner for Stevenage knocks out Aston Villa

Stevenage could only name six substitutes but two of them, Jamie Reid…

Italian prisoner shoots at rivals with gun ‘smuggled in by drone’

Inmate with mafia links fired at fellow prisoners through cell bars, says…

Government plans to turn England homes green ‘in chaos’ with debt and job losses

Exclusive: firms out of pocket and losing faith in scheme administered by…