Upskirting is the act of taking a photo up a woman’s skirt without her consent.
In 2009 it was made illegal in Scotland but shockingly it remains legal in England and Wales.
Authorities can ask a perpetrator to delete the photo but under current law no further prosecution is possible.
Police have managed to prosecute some people for upskirting for outraging public decency. But this is patently absurd as it should not matter how public it was or who else saw it. This also ignores the fact this is a crime with a victim.
Police are stuck trying to prosecute a sexual offence with a public nuisance order.
The law should focus on the individual victims and the crime committed against them because it is their body that is being taken advantage of without their consent.
Some Ministers have tried to claim that police need better training, but this is simply not true.
Police and Crime Commissioners from across the country have called for upskirting to become a specific offence as it is so difficult to prosecute with the law as it currently stands.
Due to the lack of a clear legal framework around the issue, the actual number of offences taking place each year is likely to be much higher.
Police are not required to keep a record of the reports they receive. The Press Association’s FOI found that only 15 of 44 police forces in England and Wales recorded upskirting reports in the last two years.
Girls as young as ten have been targeted by this horrific crime.
Upskirting causes emotional distress and leaves a lasting impact.
It is time the law is changed to criminalise this distressing and disgusting practice.
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