Child Criminal Exploitation (CCE)
Criminal exploitation is child abuse where children and young people are manipulated and coerced into committing crimes. These crimes may include county lines, working in cannabis factories, shoplifting, pickpocketing, theft, threatening/committing serious violence to others. Children may be coerced into carrying weapons such as knives or begin to carry a knife for a sense of protection from harm from others.
It’s important to be aware of the risks of criminal exploitation or being involved with a criminal gang. Perpetrators can use different tactics to recruit and exploit children and young people, including bribing them with rewards, befriending them, and threatening them, or coercing them.
Dangers of criminal exploitation include:
Being subject to threats, blackmail and violence
Being exploited and forced to commit crimes
Being arrested, including for crimes committed by the gang that they have not directly committed under the law of joint enterprise
Not being able to leave or cut off ties with the gang
Having their safety or the safety of friends and family threatened
What to look out for
Frequently absent from and not performing well
Going missing from home, staying out late and travelling for unexplained reasons
In a relationship or hanging out with someone older than them
Being angry, aggressive or violent
Being isolated or withdrawn
Having unexplained money and buying new things
Wearing clothes or accessories in gang colours or getting tattoos
Using new slang words
Spending more time on social media and being secretive about time online
Making more calls or sending more texts, possibly on a new phone or phones
Self-harming and feeling emotionally unwell
Taking drugs and abusing alcohol
Committing petty crimes like shop lifting or vandalism
Unexplained injuries and refusing to seek medical help
Carrying weapons or having a dangerous breed of dog
Support Available
If you have any concerns regarding CCE then please speak to a member of The Safeguarding Team. The team will support students who are at risk of CCE and offer advice and support to parents/ carers.