The
Serious
Organised Crime Agency (Soca) has enjoyed a good first year of operation,
according to its director general Bill Hughes.
Since its inception on 1 April 2006 the organisation has made 684 arrests,
charged 343 people and is currently achieving a 94 per cent conviction rate when
it brings cases to court.
Soca is also pioneering a new approach to policing by focusing on crime and
harm reduction rather than following politically directed targets.
"Our target is to reduce crime, not hit targets," said Hughes. "It's a whole
new relationship to how the police operate."
Speaking at the start of the fifth
eCrime
Congress in London, Hughes said that one of the chief roles of the unit, and
the conference, is to foster better relationships between corporates, government
and law enforcement agencies.
Soca has made use of new asset seizure laws over the past year, allowing it
to bring court orders against 80 online criminals and recover £12.9m in stolen
assets.
In addition, some individuals will now have to report quarterly income and
outgoings information so that further purloined funds can be identified and
seized.
On an operational basis, Soca has organised a single network infrastructure
for information sharing, and established a database of the top online criminals
for use in detections.
The organisation, which now has a network of 23 officers overseas
collaborating with other police forces to help with cross-border crime, claims
to be the second largest network in the world after the
US
Drug Enforcement Agency.
The main focus of activity is drugs and immigration crime, which has doubled
over the past year.
Hughes said that Soca had liaised with the
Royal
Navy over drugs interdiction, and that the Navy had made five drugs seizures
in the past year worth £58m, including finding 11 tons of cocaine in November.
Commander Will Warrender, commanding officer of
HMS
Argyll, said: "The Royal Navy is working closely with other agencies such as
Soca in the fight against drugs.
"I am delighted yet again that we have been able to play our part in the
battle to keep drugs off our streets."
But Hughes warned that the battle against electronic crime is a "marathon,
not a sprint", and that new criminal techniques are evolving all the time.
Hughes will present a full annual report to parliament shortly.
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