May pushes for greater surveillance in the face of growing terror threat
As the state launches a publicity drive to warn of the need for greater surveillance, this week is also about the lessons learned from Woolwich.
2,377 items found
David Cameron is to meet with intelligence and security chiefs to discuss Britain’s response to the terror attacks in France, the day after joining one million marchers on the streets of Paris.
People who ask children to sext them will be breaking the law under plans announced by David Cameron on Thursday. But critics doubt an already overstretched police service will be able to cope.
Anti-abortion protesters are filmed being confronted by a local resident outside a London clinic, where a pregnant woman delivered a plea last week insisting they should stop “judging” women.
Exclusive: Figures obtained by Channel 4 News show a small number of Metropolitan police officers carrying out most stops and searches, with only a small proportion of stops leading to arrest.
Privacy campaigners vow to take their case to the European court after a secret tribunal rules that GCHQ mass surveillance techniques are lawful and not in breach of human rights.
Theresa May’s inquiry into historical allegations of child sex abuse is plunged into crisis after a number of alleged victims threatened to withdraw unless major changes were made.
A charismatic and well-connected MP, Jeremy Thorpe’s political career was ended by a scandalous court case in which he was accused of being behind an attempt to murder a former gay lover.
Britain could have four times as many slaves as previously thought, according to a new estimate from the Home Office.
New figures show 260,000 more people came into the UK than left in the year up to June 2014, shattering David Cameron’s pledge to reduce the numbers to under 100,000. So what is the problem?
The former Conservative chief whip says he is “bitterly disappointed” after a judge finds, on the balance of probability, he did use the word “pleb” during a row with Downing Street police in 2012.
As the state launches a publicity drive to warn of the need for greater surveillance, this week is also about the lessons learned from Woolwich.
Theresa May is expected to unveil plans to make psychological and emotional abuse a criminal offence with a lengthy prison term, according to reports.
David Cameron wants to cancel the passports of people suspected of fighting for groups like Islamic State. Is he going far enough?
British jihadists who fight for Isis in Syria or in Iraq could be prevented from returning to the UK, David Cameron announces.
The Wanless review of the Home Office’s handling of child sex abuse allegations is one of many such inquiries. Here are the others, from Savile and Cyril Smith to Rochdale and Rotherham.