Scotland’s new hate crime law leaves police swamped by almost 4,000 spurious claims in 24 hours
The Scottish Conservative shadow justice secretary warned the complaints would soon overtake the number of real crimes
A NEW hate crime law has left police swamped by almost 4,000 spurious claims in 24 hours.
Senior officers have had to set up a special “gold group” of investigators, with 60 cases an hour being processed.
Scotland’s Community Safety Minister Siobhan Brown admitted the legislation, introduced north of the border on Monday, was leading to people making “false and vexatious” claims.
Ms Brown revealed a false claim had even been submitted under her name, with Police Scotland phoning her office number to check.
She said: “Obviously, this was a fake complaint.”
The Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act has made it an offence to stir up hatred against protected groups.
But campaigners, including Harry Potter author JK Rowling, say it restricts free speech, making it illegal to speak up about biological sex.
She had dared officers to arrest her over her tweets about several trans individuals but Police Scotland said her comments were “not assessed to be criminal”.
Scottish Conservative shadow justice secretary Russell Findlay warned the law had already been weaponised by “thin-skinned troublemakers” and placed an unprecedented burden on police officers.
He said: “Police Scotland has been inundated with complaints, many of them spurious nonsense from activists.
“At this rate, the number of hate complaints will overtake the number of real crimes.
“Officers want to protect our communities, not waste precious time investigating every single perceived hate crime.”
A police source said Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf has received more complaints than Ms Rowling.
Those were over his 2020 speech on being the “only non-white person in the room”.