The creation of a national e-crime co-ordination unit is getting underway
following financial support from the
National Policing Improvement Agency
(NPIA).
But without continued central government funding the scheme will have to rely
on private sector contributions, and may take longer to get up and running.
The 45-strong team will be run by London’s
Metropolitan Police and will take on
some of the functions of the National Hi-tech
Crime Unit, which was absorbed by the
Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) in
April last year.
The unit, first proposed last October, will co-ordinate all 43 local forces’
e-crime divisions, and will liaise with Soca and relevant Welsh and Scottish
agencies.
Sue Wilkinson, e-crime lead at the Association of Chief Police Officers and
chief architect of the new scheme, says NPIA funding is a milestone in setting
up the unit.
‘We have enough money to get the programme management in place and have
secured all the political agreements,’ she said.
Early priorities will be to improve basic e-crime training for officers and
create a comprehensive e-crime reporting web site.
Financial support from the cash-strapped
Home Office is not guaranteed. But
the scheme already has private sector backers to draw on, says Wilkinson. ‘It
will be from a mixture of business, financial services firms and ISPs,’ she
said.
Careful balancing of commercial sponsor interest and clear legal protocols
will ensure the unit’s policing agenda remains independent, says Wilkinson.
But government funding is preferable, says Peter Sommer, e-crime expert at
the London School of Economics.
‘However legally independent a unit is, pressure can be applied in subtle
ways and there is always some feeling of obligation,’ he said.
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