Kent Police Issue CCTV Appeal After Serious Assault on Maidstone High Street
Kent Police Maidstone have released CCTV images and are asking the public to help identify individuals connected to a serious assault in Maidstone town centre.
The Appeal
Kent Police Maidstone posted an appeal on their official social media account asking the public to help identify individuals shown in CCTV images connected to a serious assault on Maidstone High Street. The post directed followers to the full details via the Kent Police website, where a formal appeal statement is published.
The assault took place on Maidstone High Street, a central commercial thoroughfare in the town centre that is home to a concentration of bars, restaurants and shops. The exact timing of the incident, the number of people involved and the nature of the injuries sustained have not been publicly specified in the appeal posted by Kent Police Maidstone.
What Police Have Said
Kent Police Maidstone, a verified district policing team within Kent Police, described the incident as a serious assault — a categorisation that, according to Home Office crime recording standards, indicates either injuries requiring medical treatment or the presence of aggravating factors. The force has not yet publicly named any suspects or confirmed whether any arrests have been made in connection with the alleged offence.
The release of CCTV images forms part of Kent Police’s approach to investigating serious assaults and public order offences where suspects have not yet been identified. Such releases are governed by the UK General Data Protection Regulation and the Data Protection Act 2018, which permit police to publish images where necessary for the prevention or detection of crime.
The Broader Picture
Maidstone town centre is covered by multiple public space CCTV cameras operated under a community safety partnership arrangement between Maidstone Borough Council and Kent Police, according to the council’s community safety documentation. Those systems are designed to allow the capture of evidential footage in incidents of this kind.
The appeal comes against a backdrop of sustained levels of violent crime across Kent. According to Office for National Statistics data for the year ending 31 March 2025, Kent Police recorded 91,064 violence against the person offences during that period. Within that total, 7,786 were recorded as violence with injury. The figures are county-wide and are not specific to this incident or to Maidstone High Street.
Ongoing Investigation
Kent Police have not yet confirmed whether the individual or individuals shown in the CCTV images are suspected of carrying out the assault or are being sought as witnesses. Anyone who recognises the individuals shown, or who was present on Maidstone High Street at the time of the alleged incident, is asked to contact Kent Police. Local businesses on the High Street that operate their own premises CCTV systems may also hold footage relevant to the investigation, according to Kent Police’s standard guidance on public appeals of this nature.
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Key Takeaways
- Kent Police Maidstone have released CCTV images in connection with an alleged serious assault on Maidstone High Street and are appealing for the public’s help in identifying individuals shown.
- The incident has been categorised as a serious assault, though exact details including the timing, number of victims and nature of injuries sustained have not been publicly confirmed.
- Kent recorded 91,064 violence against the person offences and 7,786 offences of violence with injury in the year ending 31 March 2025, according to Office for National Statistics data.
What This Means for Kent Residents
Anyone who recognises the individuals shown in the CCTV images, or who was in the area of Maidstone High Street at the time of the alleged incident, is asked to contact Kent Police via the non-emergency number 101 or through the online reporting tool on the Kent Police website, quoting the reference number provided in the full appeal statement. Residents and businesses in Maidstone town centre who hold their own CCTV or mobile phone footage that may be relevant are asked to preserve that material and make it available to officers. Kent Police have not specified a deadline for information, and evidence of this kind can be critical to progressing an investigation into an alleged serious assault.
Source: @KentPoliceMaid
Published: 28 June 2026