Mobile phone
The most popular hunting grounds for mobile phone thieves are pubs and clubs

Cambridge is UK's top mobile phone crime city

Women and young people most at risk

Written by Guy Dixon

Britons are still not doing enough to protect their valuables

John Walkley CPP Phonesafe

Cambridge is officially the top spot in the UK for mobile phone theft and fraud, according to a survey by life assistance business CPP.

The city was followed by Leicester, London, Birmingham, Glasgow and Sheffield, all of which registered more than 10 per cent of residents as having had their phones stolen.

CPP's research also showed that women were more vulnerable than men, and that one in five of all 16-24 year-olds had been victims of mobile theft or fraud.

The most popular hunting grounds for mobile phone thieves are pubs and clubs, where more than a quarter of crimes are committed.

"The constantly high rate of mobile phone theft reflects the fact that Britons are still not doing enough to protect their valuables," said John Walkley, head of mobile phone security at CPP Phonesafe.

"It is important to remember that your mobile phone is worth more than its retail price. Once stolen, fraudsters can use all the information it carries and engage in criminal activities."

Top 10 UK cities for mobile phone theft:

Cambridge (20 per cent)
Leicester (19 per cent)
London (15.5 per cent)
Birmingham (13.7 per cent)
Glasgow (12.1 per cent)
Sheffield (11.8 per cent)
Manchester (9.4 per cent)
Liverpool and Southampton (9.2 per cent)
Newcastle (8.7 per cent)

Likeliest location for theft:

Pub (14.8 per cent)
Club (11.7 per cent)
High Street/Restaurant (7.2 per cent)
Home (6.3 per cent)
Holiday abroad (5.8 per cent)
At work (5.4 per cent)
Shop (4 per cent)
Bus (3.1 per cent)
Supermarket (3.1 per cent)
Train (2.7 per cent)

Further reading

Stolen mobiles blocked in 24 hours

Handset theft now pointless, claims Home Office   More...

Mobile payments to ring up $11bn by 2011

Analyst predicts 52 million consumers paying for goods via mobile technology   More...

Organised crime holding off on mobile viruses

Mostly the work of amateurs, say experts   More...

Companies still ignoring mobile data perils

Nine out of 10 firms putting information and reputation at risk   More...

Related articles

Web scams trick one in five US surfers

Victims admit to compromising their own security   More...

Brits 'too lazy' to prevent ID theft

Survey uncovers widespread apathy   More...

Fraudsters gear up for bumper Christmas

Online shoppers still leaving themselves exposed   More...

ID thief in the doghouse after puppy scam

Hapless scammer steals poodle's identity   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

13 May 2008

3.06 MBBloody students, goodbye to Dixons and hacking excuses More...

BusinessGreen.com podcast logo

13 May 2008

1.82 MBEco-Entrepreneur introduction More...

12 May 2008

2.4 MBMicrosoft's battles, data breach fines and website rip-offs More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

BlackBerry Bold

RIM unveils slimmed-down BlackBerry Bold

New handset due this summer   More...

BlackBerry Bold

BlackBerry Bold takes on 3G iPhone

New models go head-to-head, says analyst   More...

Advertisement

HP

HP 'in talks' to buy EDS

Company offering upwards of $12bn   More...

Virgin Media

Virgin prepares 50Mbps launch in 2008

Successful trial clears network for higher speeds   More...

Advertisement