A POSTMAN was told by the police to destroy a purse that he had found after he tried to hand it in as lost property to a police station.

Steven Gill, Royal Mail postman from Oxford, was shocked when he was told that the lost property service is no longer provided at St Aldate’s police station.

A man has since informed the Oxford Mail of the name of the owner of the purse.

He found a lady’s purse in a red post box on Thursday while collecting mail, something that he says happens often.

He said: “I was emptying the post box and there was a lady’s purse inside. We do get this quite a bit where thieves steal wallets, take the cash and dump them in red post boxes.

“It didn’t have any cash in and usually I would use Facebook to track down the owner and return it to them, but the ID in this purse was Japanese so I couldn’t read it.”

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Oxford Mail:

Mr Gill then took it to the police station, but he was not expecting to hear the news that the police would not be able to take it and they had not been providing the service for the past six months.

He said: “The officer told me that they don’t have the resources anymore to deal with it. She asked me: ‘Can you destroy it?’ and I got really annoyed because I didn’t know what to do with it. It shouldn’t be my responsibility.”

The purse is, according to the postman, in ‘mint condition’ and worth £175.

Mr Gill, who has been a postman for 25 years and works throughout Oxfordshire is shocked at how the police cannot provide such a basic service especially after the police portion of Oxfordshire’s council tax has recently increased.

He said: “The most annoying part about this is that this is the most basic thing that a police station should provide. I just don’t understand why they can’t have a couple of cabinets to store lost property.”

He added: “If I lost something you would hope that someone would be a good Samaritan and find the owner. I asked at work and they’ve never heard about this before. It’s a waste of time going to the police station. I think, if it had money in, they would have taken it.”

Oxford Mail:

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From October 1, 2018, all police forces across the UK ceased accepting lost property reports.

The police have said that people should now hand in lost property to the 'relevant agency' and that only items that are of 'high value' can be handed in.

People are encouraged to report the loss to a relevant agency such as the Passport Office for lost passports.

Mobile phones, high value jewellery and possessions, cash, firearms, ammunition, explosives, chemicals, toxins, poisons, drugs and medicine should continue to be handed in to the police so that they can either trace the owner or deal with the item safely.

However on the Thames Valley Police website, it still states that if you have found a valuable item in a public place and you cannot find its owner, to take the item to a local police station or hand it to an officer or PCSO.

It also states that if a foreign ID is found -which in this case it is - you must hand it in to the station or to a police officer or PCSO.

Do you recognise the woman in the photo?