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Episode 2

Episode 2 of 18

X-Ray goes undercover to investigate whether shops are selling knives to children, there’s energy saving advice and a horror story about an airport parking firm.

29 minutes

Last on

Tue 27 Sep 2022 11:45

Shops sell blades to underage teens

Shops sell blades to underage teens
Stores in Wales are breaking the law by selling knives to under 18s, X-Ray’s undercover investigation found. 
The programme shows how independent stores and a national chain in Cardiff are selling knives to underage teenagers without any ID checks. It’s illegal for any business to sell knives to anyone under the age of 18.  The only exception are folding pocket knives that have a cutting edge no longer than 3 inches or are not lock-knives. 
Knife crime figures in Wales have more than doubled over the past decade. There was a slight decrease over the pandemic, but rates are on the rise once again. 
Of the fifteen stores, that X-Ray’s undercover teenagers – aged 16 and 17 - visited in Cardiff, ten (66%) sold knives without any ID checks.
Emily Powell, from the Wales Violence Prevention Unit, works with children under 18 who’ve been found carrying knives and then referred to the unit. She says young people carry knives for a number of reasons, “They feel they have to be carrying weapons to be able to protect themselves. (also) If all your friends around you are carrying knives and weapons it’s normalised so it’s ok for them.â€Â 
The youngest person Emily has worked with was a primary school child aged just 8 years old. “He’d got a knife from the kitchen at home and taken it to school and the school then found the knife on him.â€Â 
The programme also features a man from South Wales who spent 10 years in prison after stabbing someone in a fight. He had regularly carried a knife from the age of 14 and spoke about why he feels young people carry knives. “It’s just a fashion thing for kids now. Some people probably carry for fear, so people carry just to look cool. And that’s the scary thing, everyone’s got them. He’s got one, so he’s got to have one, if he’s got one, he’s got to have one, you know it just has that chain effect.â€
The secret filming footage captured by X-Ray shows multiple breaches of the law. The programme showed the footage to the Ben Kinsella Trust, an anti-knife crime charity set up after 16-year-old Ben Kinsella was stabbed to death in 2008. 
The charity’s CEO, Patrick Green, said: “This is shocking footage. Here we have retailers disregarding the law, handing knives over to young people. In one instance it’s clear that the retailer understands the law, but still goes and breaks the law by passing that knife over to a young person.  I’m deeply, deeply saddened, I’m deeply, deeply shocked by this footage.â€

Credits

Role Contributor
Executive Producer Alison Martin
Producer Sean Hughes

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