Shoplifters in Kerry Giving Two Fingers to The State  – Ní Mhurchú Calls for Zero-Tolerance Approach

MEP Cynthia Ní Mhurchú – keeping an eye of shoplifting offences in Kerry where the trend over the past 20 years has been upwards with a 108% increase in the number of recorded incidents in the Kerry Garda Division.

Ireland South MEP Cynthia Ní Mhurchú has obtained updated regional crime figures from the CSO which show that shoplifting has dramatically increased across most counties in Ireland over the past 20 years.

The Ireland South MEP has called for tough action against the minority of people who feel it is acceptable to steal from hard working small family retail businesses.

Whilst recorded shoplifting offences did drop by 10.7% between 2023 and 2024 in Kerry, the trend over the past 20 years has been upwards with a 108% in the number of recorded incidents of shoplifting in the Kerry Garda Division between the years 2003 and 2024.

Highest Recorded Incidents in Kerry

Incidences have gone from 340 in 2003 up to 707 in 2024. 2023 and 2024 are the years with the highest recorded incidents of shoplifting in Kerry since 2003.

Kerry had 707 incidents of shoplifting recorded by the CSO in 2024 but Donegal, by comparisons, had only 384 incidents of shoplifting recorded in 2024.

Amongst the measures Ní Mhurchú is calling for to immediately address shoplifting is for Government to introduce the Retail Crime Strategy which was promised in the Programme for Government.

Call for Immediate Action

The Ireland South MEP has also called for other measures included in the Programme for Government to be introduced immediately.

MEP Ní Mhurchú is calling for mandatory prison sentences for anyone caught shoplifting on more than one occasion.

An update the Public Order Acts to allow a prolific offender of retail crime to be excluded from a premises for a certain period of time.

Support targeted garda operations to tackle retail crime and remove assets from those suspected of organised retail theft. Introduce a specific offence of assaulting a retail worker.

End Retail Defamation

End the practice of ‘retail defamation’ where someone can sue a retailer for defamation if they are stopped with the bona fide belief that they have stolen something from the shop.

According to one retailer that Ní Mhurchú spoke to, small retailers are fed up with what they see as a revolving door justice system for shoplifters.

That retailer outlined his issues with retail theft:“Filing a report with Gardaí is hardly worth it. Gardai are also fed up seeing the same people getting off the hook and their time is being wasted with the same offenders again and again.

Straight Box to the Jaw

In the last year I have been in court twice. My son tried to stop a guy robbing cigarettes and he got a straight box to the jaw, which could have broken it. That offender only got 3 months added to his current sentence. I caught a guy robing €90 worth of chocolate from me. He was already on a suspended sentence, which was activated but he appealed it to the Circuit court and walked free. He was back at my shop the following week, after been warned by the court to stay away”

The CSO shoplifting figures indicate a dramatic trend upwards in shoplifting offences across most counties in Ireland. Some of the biggest jumps between the year 2003 and 2024 occurred in countries like Tipperary, Wexford, Wicklow, Kildare and Limerick.

Ms. Ní Mhurchú welcomed the fact that, while the 20 plus year trend for shoplifting has gone up, counties like Mayo, Kerry, Donegal, Waterford, Clare, and Galway all recorded percentage decreases for the number of recorded shoplifting offences between 2023 and 2024. Ní Mhurchú attributed this to more focused Garda actions of late and she praised Gardai for beginning to make progress against shoplifters.

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