New powers to tackle serious and organised crime announced
6 Jun 2014 04:32 PM
Serious Crime Bill
published by the Home Office
Legislation that will strengthen
the ability of law enforcement agencies to disrupt serious and organised crime
was published by the Home Office.
A new Serious
Crime Bill will provide the National Crime Agency and others with
greater powers to prosecute those responsible, deny them the proceeds of their
illegal activity and effectively tackle cyber crime and the illegal drugs
trade.
The Bill will strengthen and
update laws to protect vulnerable individuals at risk of child cruelty, sexual
exploitation and female genital mutilation.
It also includes new powers to
reduce the threat posed by UK citizens and residents returning home after
taking part in the conflict in Syria.
The Bill builds on existing
legislation and the Serious and Organised Crime Strategy, which was published
in October 2013 and aims to cut substantially the level of serious and
organised crime affecting the UK and its interests.
Home Secretary Theresa May
said:
Serious and organised crime
blights lives and causes misery across the UK. It is a threat to our national
security and costs hard-working taxpayers at least £24 billion a
year.
Through the creation of the
National Crime Agency and publication of the Serious and Organised Crime
Strategy last year, we have strengthened our ability to tackle this pernicious
threat. We have made life for its perpetrators tougher than ever before –
but as the challenges evolve so too must our response. This Bill will ensure
that the NCA, the police and others have the powers they need to continue
effectively and relentlessly to pursue, disrupt and bring to justice so-called
‘Mr Bigs’ and the organised criminal groups they
control.
It will also introduce measures
to guard against the threat of terrorism and protect vulnerable women and
children.
Measures in the Serious Crime
Bill will:
- Improve our ability to recover
criminal assets by amending the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.
- Amend the Computer Misuse Act
1990 to ensure sentences for attacks on computer systems fully reflect the
damage they cause.
- Create a new offence targeting
people who knowingly participate in an organised crime group.
- Extend the scope of Serious
Crime Prevention Orders and gang injunctions.
- Establish new powers to seize,
detain and destroy chemical substances suspected of being used as cutting
agents for illegal drugs.
- Clarify the Children and Young
Persons Act 1933 to make it explicit that cruelty which is likely to cause
psychological harm to a child is an offence.
- Create a new offence of
possessing ‘paedophilic manuals’.
- Extend the extra-territorial
reach of the offences in the Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 (and the
equivalent Scottish legislation) so that they apply to habitual as well as
permanent UK residents.
- Allow people suspected of
committing an offence overseas under sections 5 (preparation of terrorist acts)
or 6 (training for terrorism) of the Terrorism Act 2006 to be prosecuted in the
UK.