Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 11
Met Police Shares 14,000 Stolen-Phone Cases With Apple, Seeks Law to Block Reactivation
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 11

Met Police Shares 14,000 Stolen-Phone Cases With Apple, Seeks Law to Block Reactivation

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 11

Summary

  • Met Police said it has begun sharing stolen-handset data with Apple to track whether devices are reconnected to networks and build a global picture of where they end up.
  • Sir Mark Rowley is also pressing the home secretary for legislation requiring phone companies to publish stolen-device data and enforce measures that make handsets effectively unusable.
  • Only a minority of stolen phones are now being reactivated compared with a few months ago, Rowley said, arguing that collapsing resale value would cut the incentive to steal them.
  • Phone thefts in London fell by 14,000 in the year to May 2026, down 18% from the previous year, while Westminster has recorded a 45.8% drop so far this year.
  • The Met says the international trade in stolen phones is worth millions of dollars; Samsung and Google are also making security changes after Rowley warned tech firms in March.

Insights

Have Apple and Google truly ended the multi-million dollar stolen phone trade, or just started a new arms race with criminals?
Will making stolen phones worthless reduce street crime, or will thieves just pivot to more violent tactics for other valuables?
As police demand a phone 'kill switch,' are tech giants finally being held accountable for their products' total societal costs?