The Scotsman

Civilians to help police take on cyber crime

- By CHRIS MARSHALL

Police Scotland will recruit a “cadre of experts” to tackle the growing threat of cyber crime.

The new force will be drawn from the private sector and will be tasked with taking on criminal hackers.

Police said there have been 34 ransomware attacks in Scotland in the past year, including 13 on NHS health boards on 13 May, part of a global assault which paralysed parts of the NHS.

The experts will be drafted in to help when required in the same way as police employ special constables.

Police Scotland plans to create a “special constabula­ry” of private sector computer specialist­s who will be called on to help defeat the growing threat from cyber-crime.

The national force will use a “cadre of experts” to help bolster its reaction to ransomware attacks, such as the one which hit the NHS last month.

Detective Superinten­dent Willie Cravens, head of Police Scotland’s cyber-crime unit, said there had been 34 ransomware attacks in Scotland in the past year, including 13 on NHS health boards on May 13.

The attack locked computers in hospitals and GP surgeries across the UK, with users sent a demand for a payment of around £230.

A number of organisati­ons around the world were affected, with reports of infections in more than 70 countries.

Mr Cravens admitted his force is unable to match the salaries paid to those currently working in the private sector, but said specialist­s could be drafted in on an ad hoc basis.

He said: “One of the things we’re looking at is the private sector where they have real expertise on ransomware. There are people who are ready and willing to come and work with us as cyber specialist­s. We want to develop a cadre of specialist­s who can work with us when we have a need for them. When the NHS attack happened, if we could have pulled on private sector expertise, I would have done that.”

He added: “It would operate like a special constabula­ry, people who had to work so many hours a year. They wouldn’t wear the uniform, they wouldn’t go out and police the streets, but they would be there for us if there was an attack.”

Last year the Scottish Police Authority (SPA) said the future of policing in Scotland involved fewer uniformed officers and more graduates working in “darkened rooms” to help meet the threat of cyber-crime.

Mr Cravens said a “huge amount” of work was needed to train existing police officers to deal with cyber-enabled crime. But he said his staff would be supplement­ed by highly paid and highly skilled specialist­s from the financial or IT sectors.

He added: “Let’s be honest, these people are not going to come and work [full-time] with law enforcemen­t.

“The salaries that are getting paid in the private sector are way beyond anything that we’re going to be able to pay for that level of individual.”

 ??  ?? 0 Cyber specialist­s have much-needed ransomware expertise
0 Cyber specialist­s have much-needed ransomware expertise

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