The Office for National Statistics (ONS) found a 22% increase in sex crimes in comparison to pre-COVID levels. Despite being logged, a charity worker warned those charged for sexual offences is at an “abysmal new low”. 

The number of sexual offences logged by police has hit a record high in England and Wales.

According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) there were 199,021 sex crimes logged by forces up to September 2022, an increase of 22%, in comparison to March 2020 (163,244).

Of these, 35% (70,633) were rapes – a 20% increase from the 59,104 recorded in the year prior to the pandemic.

Diana Fawcett, chief executive of charity Victim Support, said the system is in “crisis” as a rise in recorded sexual offences comes as cases seeking justice plummet to an “abysmal new low”.

“Charges for rape and sexual offences have been falling sharply for the past six years,” she said. “We are on a path to destroying victims’ faith in the criminal justice system altogether.”

Figures also showed that the overall number of crimes recorded by England and Wales police forces exceeded pre-pandemic levels to reach 6.6 million.

But the ONS urged that the data be interpreted with “caution” as a “number of factors” could be responsible for the increase. Including improvements in how police record crime as well as high-profile cases and campaigns encouraging victims to step forward.

It added that the rise in overall crime was “largely driven by increases in the offence categories, which are most subject to changes in reporting and recording practices”, meaning the figures “may not reflect a genuine increase in crime”.

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