Senior police officers and industry experts have voiced concerns about a lack
of systems for recording electronic crime, following the publication of a
Whitehall report this week.
The Parliamentary Office of
Science and Technology (Post) report on computer crime says fewer than one
in four police forces can generate any record of e-crime and that, as a result,
a large proportion goes undetected.
The report says this problem is distorting crime figures and hampering
prevention.
‘Lack of detection makes identification of computer crime in government and
police crime statistics difficult,’ says the report. ‘However, sharing
information about computer security is seen by security professionals as
necessary for defending against computer crime threats.’
Rick Naylor, president of the
Police
Superintendents’ Association, says some police forces can record information
on computer crime, but a national policy would help the process.
‘It may be that some forces’ systems are sophisticated enough to pull
information out, but there is no national system whereby this is recorded,’ he
said.
‘It is something that police forces are getting into, but it is a very new
area of policing for us.’
The report says the government’s Get
Safe Online initiative will go some way to address the problem, but says
police must be properly trained in detecting and handling e-crime.
‘Computer crime training has been made available to all officers, but uptake
has been low,’ says the report. ‘This may result in potential evidence being
lost.’
Jim Norton, senior policy adviser at the
Institute
of Directors, says proper e-crime training for police is essential.
‘It is important for officers to have forensic computer training, as many
crime scenes today contain a digital element,’ he said.
The report also highlights concern over the decision in April to make the
National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU) part of the
Serious Organised
Crime Agency (Soca).
Ollie Ross, The Corporate IT Forum’s
head of research, says more needs to be known about Soca. ‘While the NHTCU has
disappeared, the cyber criminals certainly have not,’ he said.
‘There is concern that so little is known about Soca’s remit.’
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Further Reading:
Central
unit fights cyber crime
Worldwide laws fail to fight
cyber crime
Allied against the cyber crime
threat
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