Grooming Gang

Scrutiny on Starmer, Whistleblowers Vindicated, as Audit Unmasks UK Grooming Gang Scandal

18 June 2025

4.5 MINS

A scathing government audit has exposed the scale of the UK’s grooming gang scandal — and how political correctness, especially under Keir Starmer, allowed child abuse to persist unchecked for years.

A damning national audit into group-based child sexual exploitation (CSE) in the United Kingdom has revealed years of systemic failure and political evasion, with particular scrutiny falling on the Labour Party and its leader Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

The National Audit on Group-Based Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, authored by Baroness Casey of Blackstock and released Monday, lays bare the scale of abuse and the entrenched denial that allowed it to flourish — confirming what whistleblowers and campaigners, often dismissed or vilified, have warned for years.

Commissioned by the UK government in February, the Casey report zeroes in on “grooming gangs” — organised groups of predominantly male British-Pakistani perpetrators, regularly operating with impunity in towns and cities across the country.

Baroness Casey’s conclusion was unequivocal: this was not just a policing failure, but a political and cultural failure, exacerbated by deliberate avoidance of uncomfortable truths.

“Group-based child sexual exploitation… is one of the most heinous crimes in our society,” Casey wrote. “We are talking about multiple sexual assaults committed against children by multiple men on multiple occasions; beatings and gang rapes.”

The audit delivered a searing indictment of the political class’s failure to confront the issue, with much of the institutional inertia traced back to the era when Sir Keir Starmer was Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). Under his watch, critics observe, prosecutors avoided tackling ethnic minority perpetrators — particularly British-Pakistani men — allowing systemic abuse to continue largely unchecked.

Baroness Casey condemned the failure of authorities to collect reliable ethnicity data, calling it a “major failing over the last decade or more,” and noting that questions around ethnicity “have been asked but dodged for years.”

“Our collective failure to address questions about the ethnicity of grooming gangs has dominated political and institutional focus,” she added, “with no definitive answer at the national level.”

In response to the report’s release, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that the government would launch a national inquiry, adding that he had read “every single word” of the Casey report and would implement its proposals in full.

Starmer’s announcement marked a striking U-turn, after he had previously dismissed calls for a national inquiry — pressed by both the Conservatives and Reform UK — arguing that existing recommendations from a prior review by Professor Alexis Jay were sufficient, and accusing advocates of an inquiry as “jumping on a bandwagon of the far-right.”

Grooming Gang Truths Suppressed for Years

The findings echo concerns persistently raised by figures like Tommy Robinson — long vilified in mainstream circles and censored on social media — who warned that authorities were turning a blind eye to child abuse for fear of being labelled racist.

The advocacy of billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk has also re-entered the spotlight since the report’s publication. In early 2025, Musk openly criticised Labour Party leaders, including Sir Keir Starmer and Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips, for their reluctance to address the ethnicity of perpetrators and the systemic failures that allowed abuse to continue unchecked.

Observers likewise note that Musk’s purchase of X and subsequent rollback of political censorship created an online environment where whistleblowers, survivors, and independent commentators could share evidence and testimonies about grooming gangs.

The audit estimates that around 500,000 children experience some form of sexual abuse each year in the UK, most of which goes unreported. In 2024 alone, police recorded over 100,000 child sexual abuse and exploitation offences — yet only 17,100 were officially flagged as CSE. Of those, just 700 were identified as group-based CSE incidents in the most recent data.

However, the report concludes that these figures likely represent a fraction of the true scale, due to “flawed” data collection and a reluctance on the part of authorities to confront the issue.

Incomplete and politicised data was used selectively, the audit says, to avoid tackling ethnic or religious dynamics that didn’t fit popular narratives. As a result, perpetrators exploited the silence, while victims were left unprotected.

Vulnerable Girls Failed, Blamed, and Criminalised

Of the victims identified in 2023, 78 percent were girls. Most were aged between 10 and 15, with many coming from state care, suffering disabilities, or bearing the scars of prior abuse. The audit found that these children were often groomed with gifts, drugs, or attention, then exploited through violence and manipulation — sometimes even criminalised for their coerced behaviour.

“There continues to be an awkwardness in society with acknowledging and discussing child sexual abuse,” according to the report. “There remains a tendency to apportion blame to adolescent children for their own abuse.”

This so-called ‘adultification’ has seen children — especially girls in care — treated as if they were making autonomous decisions, rather than being controlled by abusers. It is a misjudgement, the report warns, that has led to girls being arrested or dismissed rather than protected.

Despite the UK’s legal age of consent being 16, Baroness Casey found repeated examples of cases involving children aged 13 to 15 being downgraded from rape to lesser charges. This loophole, she argued, creates a dangerous ambiguity that allows perpetrators to avoid justice.

“I want the legislation on rape tightened up,” she wrote, “so that an adult having penetrative sex with a child under 16 is rape — no excuses, no defence.”

The report notes that regulatory gaps, like taxi licensing loopholes, allowed known offenders to work near vulnerable children by registering in areas with looser rules, adding to legislative failings. Some of the most notorious grooming scandals in recent years have involved the use of taxis to transport children to abuse locations.

Where progress has been made — such as police forces treating CSE as organised crime, using proactive identification of victims, and applying anti-gang strategies — these best practices remain isolated rather than standardised, Baroness Casey warned.

Justice Denied for Grooming Gang Survivors

Perhaps most harrowing are the voices of survivors. The audit records stories of women who were abused as children, only to find themselves re-traumatised by a justice system that continues to fail them. Cases have stalled for years in certain cases, and abusers have walked free. Anonymity orders meant to protect survivors have also been breached without consequence.

“These women were rightly angry at what had been allowed to happen to them as children,” the report states, “but they seemed equally traumatised by their current treatment by statutory agencies.”

In some cases, victims were even denied trauma counselling, out of fear that it might interfere with ongoing investigations — leaving them unsupported and suffering. As Baroness Casey put it, “We as a society owe these women a debt.”

The audit concludes with a series of urgent recommendations: tightening rape laws, introducing national licensing standards for high-risk professions like taxi driving, and improving demographic data collection to better understand the scope of the problem.

It also emphasises the need for political and institutional accountability — both for past failures and for addressing difficult realities moving forward.

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Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

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6 Comments

  1. Stephen Lewin
    Stephen Lewin 18 June 2025 at 8:12 am - Reply

    Thanks Kurt for a very important article to all. My brother who as a high school student made me very aware of the developing dangers when visiting family home in East London. He showed me his prowess to defend himself at scholl against gangs from an Asian origin.He had to leave school as often suspended because of stance. That was 1975 and 1976. He today is happy married and living in a rural setting on Dorset and Devon border and be is not shy of conflict zones but visits not lives in those places.
    A Generation of weak political leadership has brought UK to a desperate situation..probably one reason why many of Gen Z are connecting with the churches in London and following Christ.
    Hope to be back visiting UK within the year. The western world needs an awakening , including Australia and NZ.

  2. 927a1108abc5ae79d701588fafd6fbed88be2c6abe9ee44ce30fc3960393c057?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Lynda 18 June 2025 at 8:19 am - Reply

    Yes, Its time the body of Christ rose up in its God given Authority and fought the Good fight.

  3. 8f62c2438f356a317e14eed9bdd3ed166845fc829e06bd07379dbec3d33b1b11?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Kathy Gasper 18 June 2025 at 9:34 am - Reply

    Yes Lynda! Here is another area where the body of Christ can truly fight for the vulnerable. It also shows how much effort and pressure is needed to bring such terrible injustices into the light.

  4. DAY 31 Warwick Author CD MAY 2023 OPT
    Warwick Marsh 18 June 2025 at 10:03 am - Reply

    POwerful article about a very sad subject.

  5. 012b5d581a4ca46f6c90e05b0731147a597d555b00d395534a265f7a5a4d7365?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Pauline Tondl 18 June 2025 at 11:45 am - Reply

    A sad article, but offering some hope of a change for the better … eventually, maybe.

    Why is it, though, that so many men use sex for the most insulting and degrading activities as well as for the most personal pleasure ?

    We hear much about sexual abuse by men being a dreadful thing that shouldn’t be done – by why do we never clearly hear about WHY it shouldn’t be done, or HOW to curb such behaviour ?

    Perhaps this issue of the (dominating ?) male sex drive includes some “uncomfortable truths” that desperately need to be brought out of hiding into the clear light of day ?

    Gaining knowledge of our inescapable accountability before the living God can go a long way to restraining our various evil, hateful urges.

    So thankful that Moses brought “The Law” and Jesus Christ brought “grace and truth”.

  6. b6be5c1b0e0e296e3d56760dd148e137fea5c283dc0be67c4b01b40239fea941?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Jennifer Mok 18 June 2025 at 10:00 pm - Reply

    There is absolutely no excuse for this situation to have been happening for so long in any country. Child abuse is child abuse. No matter what the circumstances, the adult is responsible and the child is innocent. I’ve had years of people trying to refute that basic precept in my own situations. There are no excuses. the truth is absolute.

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