| Britain's top black police officer: 'We are struggling to cope with immigrant crime wave' STEPHEN WRIGHT Britain's highest ranking black policeman has warned the Home Secretary his force is struggling to cope with an immigrant crimewave. Kent chief constable Mike Fuller told Jacqui Smith "migration surges" had contributed to an increase of more than a third in violent crime over five years to 7,800 incidents in 2007. In a leaked letter, he said the Government's failure to increase his budget to match the population rise will have a "negative impact on performance". He says migration accounts for 78 per cent of Kent's population growth and warned of the soaring cost of translation services, up by a third in three years. Mr Fuller, whose force polices ferry ports and the Channel tunnel, says he will need an extra 560 constables if the immigrant population continues to surge. He says Kent's population is expected to rise from 1.6million now to 1.9million by 2029 - mostly from immigration.
In a private letter to Miss Smith on October 22 last year, he states: "I feel it is essential that I set out the impact population growth is having in Kent and the pressure it is placing on finite resources." He says the total extra cost to the force is £34million over the past three years and accuses the Home Office of not increasing his budget by enough to cope. "There is a danger that if the future funding regime fails to respond to dynamic changes in migration the extra demand this generates will impact negatively on performance," he said. Mrs Spence said more officers were needed to deal with an increase in traffic offences and crimes such as prostitution. She, too, accused the Government of failing to provide adequate resources to deal with the new problem. She explained the effect of immigration had seeped into all areas of policing. Migrants got into difficulties because they were unfamiliar with traffic laws. Police had also noticed a growth in prostitution, driven by the influx of large numbers of single men.
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