The Borneo Post

Europol: Police must get ‘ tech-savvy’ to catch criminals

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THE HAGUE: Europe's police officers need to become ‘as techsavvy' as the criminals they are trying to catch, its policing agency urged Thursday, saying it had identified some 5,000 gangs operating across the continent.

“Technology is a key component of most, if not all criminal activities carried out by organised crime groups in the EU,” Europol director Rob Wainwright said at the launch of a new report, aimed at helping to shape European crime-fighting policy for the next four years.

“Policing has got to adapt and follow in the same way. We've got to have police officers with digital, forensic analytical capabiliti­es. They have got to get used to following crime across the Darknet, however challengin­g that is,” Wainwright said, speaking to AFP on the sidelines of the report's launch.

The Darknet is a hidden online arena notoriousl­y used by criminals to trade weapons, drugs and child pornograph­y.

“The point we're making today is that the investigat­ors of all forms of serious and organised crime now need to be as tech savvy as the specialist­s they used to rely on from the back room in the past,” he added.

The 60-page report, called the Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment ( SOCTA), is the first since 2013.

It forms the ' heart' of an EUwide policy on the fight against crime for the next four years, the 28-member bloc's security commission­er Julian King said.

The report, released at Europol's fortress-like headquarte­rs in The Hague, said some 5,000 organised crime groups have been identified in Europe and were being investigat­ed.

The number has jumped from 3,600 in 2013 — “primarily a reflection of a much improved intelligen­ce picture,” Wainwright said.

“The rate of technologi­cal innovation and the ability of organised criminals to adapt to these technologi­es have also been increasing over recent years,” Wainwright said.

“Developmen­ts such as the emergence of the online trade in illicit goods and services are set to result in significan­t shifts in criminal markets,” he said. — AFP

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