HOME OFFICE News
Release (165/2008) issued by COI News Distribution Service. 30
September 2008
A new £7M police
unit dedicated to tackling cyber crime and clamping down on
internet fraud was announced by e-crime Minister Vernon Coaker today.
The new Police Central e-crime Unit (PCeU) will provide
specialist officer training and co-ordinate cross-force
initiatives to crack down on on-line offences.
E-crime is a global menace, and with an estimated 80-90 percent
of crime on the internet (excluding crime relating to children or
images of child sexual abuse) believed to be fraud-related the
unit will focus on supporting the new National Fraud Reporting
Centre (NFRC) when it comes into operation in 2009. It will also
work closely with other crime fighting agencies to tackle
international and serious organised crime groups operating on the internet.
E-crime Minister Vernon Coaker said:
"It is important that we stay one step ahead of criminals
who increasingly use sophisticated computer networks and the
internet to commit and facilitate crime.
"The new PCeU will work closely with the NFRC to tackle
electronic crime reported to it. This will ensure that the NFRC
has support in this highly specialised area.
"The PCeU will also play a vital role in helping police
forces across the country improve skills and techniques needed to
clamp down on e-crime."
Based in the Metropolitan Police Service, the PCEU will work with
the National Fraud Reporting Centre and support the development of
the police response to e-crime across the country.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Janet Williams, Association of
Chief Police Officers (ACPO) lead for e-crime, said:
"I am delighted that the Home Office has confirmed funding
for this new unit that ACPO and law enforcement agencies have been
developing. We can now work towards creating a national
coordination centre to combat e-crime in England, Wales and
Northern Ireland.
"It is our aim to improve the police response to victims of
e-crime by developing the capability of the Police Service. We
will be coordinating the law enforcement approach to all types of
e-crime, and providing a national investigative capability for the
most serious e-crime incidents."
Attorney General Baroness Scotland said:
"It is widely recognised that e-crime is the most rapidly
expanding form of criminality and knows no borders. The network is
a good example of the UK leading on an international initiative
which improves our capability to prosecute e-crime.
"The new e-crime unit will work closely with the National
Fraud Reporting Centre and National Fraud Intelligence Bureau,
both currently in development, recognising the fact the majority
of e-crime is fraud-related. I believe this relationship will
deliver a strong and emphatic response to fraudsters and help
encourage public confidence in electronic services and communication."
City of London Police Commissioner Mike Bowron said:
"The City of London Police as lead force for fraud welcomes
the Government's decision to fund a police e-crime unit.
Once established, the unit will work closely with the City of
London Police and other agencies as a key partner within the
national fraud programme."
The Serious Organised Crime Association's Deputy Director
for E-crime Sharon Lemon said:
"SOCA fully supports and welcomes the formation of the new
Police Central e-Crime Unit. In conjunction with the National
Fraud Reporting Centre, this will add real clarity to the
reporting mechanisms for internet crime in the UK. SOCA looks
forward to working closely with both bodies to gain a much more
detailed picture of the nature of this crime. This will greatly
assist in identifiying any aspects of Organised Crime's
involvement in it, and enable SOCA to better fulfill its remit of
tackling the most serious criminality and the consequent harm it
causes to the UK."
Notes to editors:
1. The PCeU will receive £3.5M of Government funding and £3.9M
from the Metropolitan Police Service over three years. The unit
will also seek support from industry partners. The unit is
expected to be operational in spring 2009.
2. Its creation builds on proposals by ACPO for increasing
capacity and capability within the police service to get to grips
with modern forms of hi-tech internet crime.
3. The Met will run the PCeU as a national resource, in
conjunction with the National Fraud Reporting Centre and the
National Fraud Intelligence Bureau.
4. The PCeU will not overlap with existing organisations such as
SOCA's e-crime unit or with CEOP, both of which have
different and separate responsibilities, but the PCeU and these
organisations will communicate regularly and will work together if required.
5. The ACPO Press Office can be contacted via 020 7084 8946/47/48
(office hours) or via 07803 903686 (out of office hours).
6. ACPO is an independent, professionally led strategic body. In
the public interest and, in equal and active partnership with
Government and the Association of Police Authorities, ACPO leads
and co-ordinates the direction and development of the police
service in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. In times of
national need ACPO, on behalf of all chief officers, coordinates
the strategic policing response.
7. ACPO's 341 members are police officers of Assistant Chief
Constable rank (Commanders in the Metropolitan Police and City of
London Police) and above, and senior police staff managers, in the
44 forces in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and other forces
such as British Transport Police and States of Jersey Police.