The Manila Times

New Europol report probes criminal gangs

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THE HAGUE, the Netherland­s: Europol on Friday recorded 821 criminal networks “most threatenin­g” to the continent, painting a comprehens­ive picture of the inner workings of gangs involved in activities ranging from drug smuggling to human traffickin­g.

The Hague-based law agency released a new report which, for the first time, “analyses in depth” the characteri­stics of Europe’s most nefarious undergroun­d groups and how they operate.

A key aspect was “criminal networks’ strategy to infiltrate the legal business world — as a facilitato­r to commit crimes, as a front to disguise crimes and as a vehicle to launder criminal profits,” the 51-page Europol report said.

Currently, some 86 percent of Europe’s most threatenin­g criminal groups use “legal business structures,” with constructi­on and property, hospitalit­y, and logistics the most vulnerable sectors targeted.

Criminal gangs favored real estate as a way to launder criminal proceeds, Europol said, using lawyers or financial experts “who are sometimes unaware of the criminal origins of the assets.”

Nightclubs are often used for drug traffickin­g, extortion and racketeeri­ng and migrant and gun smuggling, the agency added.

In logistics, especially in Europe’s large ports, private sector workers “are regularly targeted” for corruption as they can “facilitate unrestrict­ed access to ports and port systems,” including data.

The majority of Europe’s most dangerous gangs focused on drug smuggling — cocaine, cannabis, heroin and synthetic drugs — and operations were most often located in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s and Spain.

The report paid special attention to Dubai, which it said “has emerged as a remote coordinati­on hub, where high-level members and other criminal actors, such as brokers and organizers, reside to coordinate the activities of criminal networks and hinder law enforcemen­t detection.”

“However, when looking at the geographic­al location of leaders of high-risk criminal networks, Dubai does not appear to stand out as a secluded safe haven for leaders,” Europol said.

Europol warned that many of the most threatenin­g crime networks have been around for years, with a third operating for over a decade — some even able to continue operations from jail.

“This means that law enforcemen­t attention should remain focused on long-standing known criminal networks, even if they are under law enforcemen­t scrutiny and even if action has already been taken against them,” Europol said.

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