New evidence on the relationship of Buckfast Tonic Wine Crime Survey revealed by BBC Scotland.
Freedom of Information request show that the drink was in 5638 in Strathclyde said that allegations of crimes 2006-2009, equivalent to three per day on average.
One in 10 of these were violent crimes, and the bottle was used as a weapon 114 times during this period.
Buckfast distributors refused because of the crime and said that only 0.5% alcohol drink made in Scotland market.
However, Strathclyde Police said the figures suggested that there was a link between the tonic wine and violence.
Superintendent Bob Hamilton said: I think it is clear from the figures that there is a connection there. The numbers were quite clear that Buckfast refers to a series of reports of crime and throughout the season, a bottle of Buckfast used to guarantee 114 times appears as a weapon. Names Strathclyde Police on the issue of research Polmont young offenders institution in place in 2007 raised.
Found – the offenders were drinking just before the attack drunk – more than 40% had Buckfast.
The beverage produced by the Benedictine monastery in Devon.
The BBC investigation examined the data and how they affect consumer behavior.
The neurologist Dr. Steven Alexander of the University of Nottingham, said each bottle contains 281mg of caffeine – the same amount of eight packages of Coca-Cola.
He said, consume large amounts of caffeine will make people feel very frightened and aggressive.
Concern was expressed about the effects of stimulant drugs, when mixed with alcohol, the Food and Drug Administration U.S. considers that the prohibition of pre-mixed drinks containing caffeine.
Warnings about mixing the two are beginning to emerge in countries like Canada, France, Ireland, Sweden and Australia.
The monks of Buckfast Abbey rejected a request to address the problems.
However, Jim Wilson, of J Chandler & Co, a tonic wine distributor in Scotland, asked about the possibility of reducing the levels of caffeine.
He said: Why? There are over 80 years.
Why should we go to meet the change in the prescription of which only one is needed? Wilson said that the Benedictine monks are not responsible for the consequences of Buckfast in the outside world.
He said: Why should we take responsibility? You are not here, throwing a neck of a Buckfast. People who take the option, because it is a good product.

As crunch talks between the DUP and Sinn Fein resume at Stormont, there is intense speculation of an imminent deal on the devolution of justice powers.
DUP acting first minister Arlene Foster said on Sunday, the crucial issue of parading was being handled in a positive way during the talks.
She denied TUV leader Jim Allister’s view that the DUP would do a deal as MLAs were “petrified” of an election.
He said they were under pressure in the wake of the Iris Robinson scandal.
“Sinn Fein have held a gun to Peter Robinson’s head where he has a choice to make – either he rolls over and gives them their demand for policing and justice or he faces the collapse of the assembly and an election,” said Mr Allister, a former DUP member who has become the party’s arch-critic after quitting over power-sharing.
Mrs Foster is due to answer First Minister’s Questions at the assembly later.
The Alliance Party has scheduled a debate criticising the Executive’s failure to resolve critical issues.
Its motion also expresses its deep concern about the consequences for good governance, the economy and public services.
Over the weekend, DUP and Sinn Fein politicians would not confirm whether they were on the brink of a breakthrough, but they did not dampen speculation that a deal could be reached.
On Saturday, DUP assembly members were called to Stormont for a briefing on the negotiations.
Mrs Foster said on Sunday that there was a good atmosphere at the talks and rejected claims by Mr Allister that they were negotiating “with a gun to their head”.
She began work as acting first minister last week after DUP leader Peter Robinson announced he was standing aside for six weeks to clear his name over an allegation surrounding his wife Iris’s financial conduct.

Cold Case detectives re-investigate unsolved murder 36 years with the latest scientific techniques of forensic DNA.
Twenty-year-old student from Glenis Carruthers discovered at Bristol Zoo strangled January 19, 1974.
The evidence of the crime scene, including clothes are reviewed at the Service Forensic Science Laboratory.
In Avon and Somerset Police major crime team is also a resource of information.
Presenter John Craven, that if the news reports from the BBC Points West at the time of the murder, the crime scene re-examine the BBC’s Inside Out West.
Detective Chief Inspector Mike Carter said: Forensic advances have much to what we hope, a profile, which then get moved compared to the national database.
John Craven interview Det Ch Insp Mike Carter of the murders in Bristol in 1974, The man who murdered Glenis Carruthers may have thought that I had with that after all these years, but we are determined to try to get to do . Dr. Colin dark, a top forensic scientist, said: In 1985, when DNA was introduced as a technique that should be treated with physical fluid material, but there are significant advances in the sensitivity of the procedure.
Now we can obtain DNA profiles from items that do not want to see and also in contact with the DNA of style where it has been reported in one subject. Glenis Carruthers education as a gym teacher at a school in Bedford and was on a visit to Bristol this weekend to a friend 21st attend the birth of his family at his home in Clifton for granted.
No one saw her leave the house, but it is believed, it was decided by a public telephone near the lows disappear over half a mile. His body was found in a meadow beside a road in front of Bristol Zoo.
Glenis brother Gordon, who was 30 at the time of the murder and is now 60, said the family and friends had suffered from years of emergency following the assassination.
My message would be, he knows it or the person knows that this is a terrible practice to do right now and the present, because the memories even when they run out of time vanished.
We want justice for Glenis and then let the memory of others in peace.

Head teachers in Edinburgh are calling on councillors to look at closing more schools instead of making sweeping budget cuts to education in the city.
Two years ago, Edinburgh City Council tried to close 22 under-occupied nurseries and schools but plans were scaled back in the face of protests.
Heads claimed 90% of their budget was allotted to fixed costs, such as pay.
They said closing under-occupied schools would be preferable to cutting the budgets of individual schools.
Their call is likely to be watched with interest by councils across the country who are having to consider serious budget cuts.
Schools in Edinburgh are facing the prospect of 2.5% cuts to their budgets in 2010-11 and there are much larger cuts predicted for future years.
Four schools have been earmarked for closure in Edinburgh, as they are running at only 33% to 41% full.
Figures from Edinburgh City Council showed that the average occupancy rate in primary schools in the city was 74%.
In secondary schools in Edinburgh it was 86%.
There are 8,429 spare primary places and 2,699 secondary places in schools in the city.
Speaking in advance of a key budget session at Edinburgh City Chambers, Rory MacKenzie of Balerno High School, said: “In Edinburgh, primary and secondary head teachers have put papers to senior councillors and the education director saying we don’t want any further budget cuts in schools.
“We have also said that we understand the financial restrictions they are under and that there needs to be a rationalisation of the school estate and therefore some schools will have to close.
“We know it is a very difficult, emotive issue and it has a serious impact on some communities.”

An old woman in the Aberdeen area has been robbed of 24,000 Euro Millions lottery scam, police said.
The woman, who is in his 70s, was convinced that a telephone number after receiving a letter that he had won a big prize of Euro Millions contact.
Grampian Police said it was cloned, the latest in a long series of scams that the North is concerned, East, which lay between the operations of fraudulent websites.
He described as a cruel fraud perpetrated fraud against a vulnerable woman.
It broke the money in two installments after a letter he had won a large place in the Euro Millions lottery.
When she contacted the phone number of a man at the other end of the line convinced him to take two sums for a total of 24,000 on their designated bank accounts for your price advantage .
She does not understand, they had been cheated, which contacted by your bank.
Insp Roddy MacInnes said: It was a very sophisticated scam, put in the second payment transaction through a genuine British company and is unprepared.
It has to be paid for car parts, with those in other parts of the world, which are in turn sold by criminals. He advised he received an unsolicited phone call or letter indicating that either have won a large sum or could be earning large amounts of money to be immediately suspicious.