M&S
calls for crackdown on ‘brazen, organised, aggressive’ retail crime
Bosses
write to home secretary and London mayor listing series of incidents staff have
faced in past week
Caroline
Davies
Fri 3 Apr
2026 10.09 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/apr/03/marks-spencer-calls-crackdown-retail-crime-clapham
Marks
& Spencer has called on the government and London’s mayor to crack down on
retail crime, saying it has become “more brazen, more organised and more
aggressive”, after reporting an increase in shoplifting and violence at its
stores.
The
M&S chief executive, Stuart Machin, has written to the home secretary,
Shabana Mahmood, and its retail director, Thinus Keeve, has written to the
London mayor, Sadiq Khan, saying greater resources are needed for police to
tackle the crime effectively and target repeat offenders and crime hotspots.
“In the
past week alone we have had gangs forcing open locked cabinets and stripping
shelves, two men brazenly emptying the shelves of steak and walking out, a
large group of young people ransacking a store before assaulting a security
guard, a colleague head- butted trying to defuse a situation and another
hospitalised after having ammonia thrown in their face,” Keeve wrote on the
M&S website.
“It is
worse in London, but it is happening across the country, and it is becoming
routine, because it seems there are no consequences.”
Police
responded to reports of antisocial behaviour involving a group of “several
hundred young people” this week in Clapham, south London, as part of “link-ups”
using social media apps, including TikTok and Snapchat.
Keeve
said there were about 5.5m incidents of shoplifting last year across the UK,
excluding “the vast number that go unreported”. “Every day, more than 1,600
retail workers face violence or abuse. This is not isolated. It is systemic and
it is getting worse, not better.”
He added:
“Without a government seriously cracking down on crime and a mayor that
prioritises effective policing we are powerless. We need a stronger, faster and
more consistent police response, using tools that already exist to target
repeat offenders and crime hotspots. And we need far greater transparency on
crime so the true scale and impact is understood and can be used to target
resources.
“We need
to recognise this for what it is. A systemic issue. A growing issue. And one
that demands a coordinated response across government, policing and industry.”
About 100
officers were called to Clapham High Street on Tuesday where young people were
reported to be attempting to access shops and a restaurant. Fires were also lit
on Clapham Common and fireworks set off.
Six
teenage girls were arrested after two separate incidents of antisocial
behaviour “fuelled by online trends”, according to the Metropolitan police.
Five people were assaulted, including four police officers. The Met said it
expected more arrests would be made in the coming days.
Khan has
condemned the scenes in Clapham as “utterly unacceptable”. He said “the
culprits will face the full force of the law” and that police were working with
social media companies to try to clamp down on “viral online content which
promotes violence and theft”.
Adam
Hawksbee, the head of external affairs at M&S, told BBC Radio 4’s Today
programme: “Retail crime has always been a challenge, but it does feel in the
past weeks and months that the problem is getting worse.”
Asked
about the impact of shoplifting on staff, Hawksbee said it “clearly has an
impact”, and that staff “worried about coming into work, they might be nervous
about the journey home, and that’s not the position that we want our colleagues
to be in”.
Shoplifting
offences increased in England and Wales in the year to September, but remained
slightly below record levels seen in the 12 months to March 2025, the latest
Office for National Statistics figures available show.
There
were 519,381 shoplifting offences in the year to September 2025, up 5% from
492,660 the previous year. A total of 530,439 offences were recorded in the
year to March 2025.
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