November 2025 saw Scawthorpe and Cusworth record a crime rate of 11.0 per 1,000 residents, placing it 50.7% above the UK average of 7.3 per 1,000. This marked a significant deterioration from the previous month, with violent crime and shoplifting emerging as the most pressing concerns. Violence and sexual offences accounted for 32.7% of all reported crimes, a figure that exceeds the UK average by 40% and reflects a broader pattern of elevated aggression in the area. Shoplifting alone surged to 21.6% of total crimes, a stark 281% above the UK average, likely driven by the commercial activity linked to the area’s retail presence and the seasonal pressures of Black Friday shopping. The sharp rise in vehicle crime—10.5% of total crimes, 200% above the UK average—suggests vulnerabilities in parking infrastructure or enforcement during the darker evenings of late autumn. Seasonal factors, including the onset of Bonfire Night and the extended retail season, may have contributed to these spikes, though the precise interplay of economic and environmental influences remains complex. The area’s relatively high property crime rate—79 out of 153 total crimes—further underscores the need for targeted interventions, particularly in high-traffic zones where theft and vandalism are concentrated. While anti-social behaviour and other theft categories showed modest declines, the overall trajectory indicates a growing challenge for local authorities to address the root causes of these trends.