New £4m project to cut violent crime in West Midlands

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James BrindleyImage source, West Midlands Police
Image caption,

James Brindley, 26, was stabbed in the heart after a night out with friends - his family are backing the project

A new £4m unit to tackle violence will stop crime "before it starts," say commissioners.

The Violence Reduction Unit (VRU), being held in the West Midlands police area, will expand current projects and develop new ones, organisers said.

Mark Brindley, from Aldridge, whose son James was murdered in 2017, said the project "had to" make a difference.

Violent attacks against the person have risen by 32% in the region in the last year alone, said police.

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PCC David Jamieson said the VRU would bring together the public sector in the West Midlands to address the issue

Police and Crime Commissioner David Jamieson said that the VRU hopes to "reduce the number of victims and perpetrators" by addressing the "causes of crime".

Projects earmarked for expansion include current schemes which place case workers in A&E units and placing experts in GP surgeries to help domestic violence victims.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The VRU will place support workers in GP surgeries to help victims of domestic abuse

Police, councils, schools and health organisations will run violence prevention workshops and offer support to prevent prisoners re-offending.

Steve Clarke from the St Giles Trust said youth workers already embedded in Wolverhampton and Coventry A&E departments help young people caught up in violence "see a way out".

"They offer that glimmer of hope because they were once in that situation," he added.

Mr Brindley, whose son was stabbed to death on his way home from a night out, said he believed the initiative would make a difference.

"Yes I believe it can happen, there's a lot of very clever people in there," he said.

Image caption,

Mark Brindley, from Aldridge, whose son James was murdered in 2018, shared his family's experience at the launch of the VRU

Dr Sue Ibbotson, Public Health England's director for the West Midlands, said the "public health approach" would "stop violence before it starts".

The PCC has contributed £524,000 to a £3.37m sum from the Home Office to establish the unit and local councils and West Midlands Police are adding £140,000.

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