The Mail on Sunday

Crimelords BEWARE

‘Britain’s FBI’ set for huge new powers to foil County Lines drug gangs and people trafficker­s . . . as its intelligen­ce reveals a staggering 181,000 villains in 4,500 criminal organisati­ons

- By Harry Cole DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

MINISTERS are planning to give a huge budget boost and sweeping new powers to ‘Britain’s FBI’ to combat the growing threat of online paedophile rings, people trafficker­s and County Lines drugs gangs.

It comes as the National Crime Agency reveals the frightenin­g scale of organised crime in the UK.

In an interview with The Mail on Sunday, Lynne Owens, director general of the NCA, said her gangbuster­s ‘need more capability’ to fight soaring levels of organised and increasing­ly sophistica­ted crime.

She pointed out that while it was understand­able that terrorist threats dominate the headlines, it was ‘chronic and corrosive’ organised crime that ‘kills more citizens every year than war, terrorism and natural disaster combined’.

According to NCA intelligen­ce, a staggering 181,000 criminals – the equivalent of the entire population of Ipswich – are members of the 4,500 organised crime groups that span the length and breadth of Britain.

Between them, the gangs bring misery to millions and cost the UK economy at least £37 billion a year.

In response to the threat, Sir Craig Mackey, a former deputy commission­er of the Metropolit­an Police, has been asked by the Government to lead a detailed review of the NCA, what new powers it needs and what laws need to change to make it more effective.

On a tour of the NCA’s London HQ last week, Security Minister Brandon Lewis said the review would focus on ‘making sure that these guys have got the tools they need for a change i n criminal behaviour. We must make criminals afraid of operating in this country.’

It is understood that the plans, which would fundamenta­lly change how the war on organised crime is fought, include:

Streamlini­ng a number of existing crime-fighting organisati­ons and bringing them under the control of the NCA;

Substantia­lly i ncreasing the agency’s budget to fund a ‘ new phase of growth’ including extra personnel and new technology;

Reforming how fraud is investigat­ed, with the NCA taking on work currently assigned to local forces;

Introducin­g new legislatio­n and reforming the Computer Misuse and Theft Acts so they are ‘fit for purpose in the modern age’;

Revisiting plans to regulate tech giants and social media firms which Ministers and crimefight­ers think are still doing too little to fight online paedophile­s.

Despite the NCA helping to protect 10,000 children, seizing 2,700 firearms and taking 430 tons of cocaine off the streets since 2015, Ms Owens hinted that the current structure of policing risked giving crimelords the upper hand. ‘Our statutory responsibi­lity is to lead the UK fight against serious and organised crime, yet the response is devolved to at least 43 police forces, Border Force and Immigratio­n enforcemen­t, all of whom operate through different government structures,’ she said.

‘What capabiliti­es do we need that already exist but are disparate across the 43 forces? Is there a different way of structurin­g that?’

In addition to paedophile­s, drug dealers and trafficker­s, the NCA is planning to focus on the growing levels of fraud carried out by teams of i ncreasingl­y sophistica­ted domestic and foreign scamsters. ‘If you’re an old person whose life savings have been extorted, you don’t get that response and actually that’s just not good enough,’ she said. ‘So we’ve got to find a way to having live-time responses to all of the most serious offences.’

Mr Lewis added: ‘If someone takes away the last £10,000 of savings from a pensioner, that has as much impact on them as some crimes we think of as being more powerful.’

Echoing concerns about a lack of cohesion, he added: ‘There’s the Fraud Office, the City of London Police, every single police force across the country.

‘Each needs to have a fraud squad because they all have residents involved in that, but are we co-ordinating that in the best way, particular­ly with technology moving and changing how fraud is committed?’

The NCA, which launched in 2013 and currently employs about 4,400 staff, also want changes to legislatio­n which, argued Ms Owens, has failed to keep up with technology.

‘The Computer Misuse Act went through Parliament at a time when cyber wasn’t the tool that it now is to enable all sorts of crimes like fraud,’ she said. As an example, under the Theft Act, data can’t be stolen so there are some places where you probably would want it to look quite different.’

The Mackey Review is due in February, but both Mr Lewis and Ms Owens made clear they want more support from technology giants such as Facebook and Google. ‘I don’t think it’s acceptable that all the industry does at the moment is say, “We’ve identified an image of a child being abused.” [They] have a much bigger social responsibi­lity to prevent harm,’ said Ms Owens, who called in May for the NCA’s budget to be more than doubled from the current £424 million a year to £1.1 billion.

‘We wouldn’t accept people designing cars without locks, but for some reason we accept technology companies designing these systems.

‘They spend millions every year on research and developmen­t and artificial intelligen­ce tools so they know who to target their adverts at to make a profit. We think a proportion of that should be preventing offending in the first place.’

Mr Lewis added: ‘You wouldn’t dream of a newspaper publisher ever having the ability to say, “I don’t care what an advertiser puts in my magazine or newspaper, it’s going into the public domain.” ’

‘Tech giants must meet social responsibi­lities’

 ??  ?? GANG BUSTERS:
National Crime Agency officers in action
GANG BUSTERS: National Crime Agency officers in action

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