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Almost 2,000 assaults on emergency workers were prosecuted in the six months following the UK’s first national lockdown, new figures show.
The 1,688 offences also include incidents where officers were kicked, bitten and hit with heavy objects after stopping people suspected of breaking restrictions.
Max Hill QC, the Director of Public Prosecutions, said the figures were “appalling” and that attacks were still taking place.
“I will continue to do everything in my power to protect those who so selflessly keep us safe during this crisis,” he added.
“We are also determined to see wider criminality during lockdown periods reflected in court, which is evident in the charges seen in this data.”
In one recent incident, a police officer believes he was infected with Covid by a suspect who spat on him while being arrested in Bournemouth on 6 January.
The 47-year-old officer, who had been wearing a mask, said he developed symptoms two days later and has since tested positive for coronavirus.
“You can’t get control of somebody without necessarily getting hands-on on with them – especially when they are not compliant, you have to contact them physically,” he added.
“Covid has changed things… you have to enter into that sort of zone of transmission. There is no way of avoiding that. We can use all the PPE and hand sanitiser in the world ultimately we are at higher.”
The police officer said he and his colleagues should be “much nearer the front of the queue for vaccines”.
Senior police leaders have lobbied the government for frontline officers to be prioritised when the vaccine roll-out moves beyond the current four vulnerable groups.
‘Don’t blow it now,’ Hancock warns as four million now have vaccine
The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has said it will consider exposure risk and occupation in the next phase, and on Wednesday Boris Johnson told MPs he wanted police, emergency service workers and teachers to be vaccinated “as soon as possible”.
The CPS recorded 6,469 offences flagged for a link to coronavirus between April and September, involving 2,106 defendants. Ninety per cent of them were convicted.
The total included almost 1,200 prosecutions under the Health Protection Regulations, which initially enforced the national lockdown and have been adapted for different levels of restrictions, local lockdowns, mask wearing and other Covid laws.
The CPS said the cases included a man caught travelling illegally between different areas of Wales to find a prostitute, and a Manchester man who tried to claim attendees at a house party were his support bubble.
Some of the lockdown charges were against people prosecuted for other crimes , such as criminal damage and public order offences, and were breaking Covid laws at the same time.
Other coronavirus-flagged crimes were 480 public order offences, 466 criminal damage incidents, 464 common assaults and 2,234 other offences.
They included people threatening to “infect” victims with coronavirus, the theft of essential items during shortages early in the pandemic, and fraudsters taking advantage of the crisis.
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