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{{Infobox UK Police |
{{Infobox UK Police |
| name= Serious Organised Crime Agency
| name= Serious Organised Crime Agency

Revision as of 22:35, 16 February 2008

Template:Infobox UK Police

The Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) is a policing agency in the United Kingdom that acts against organised crime, including the illegal drugs trade, money laundering, and people smuggling. The Serious Organised Crime Agency works in conjunction with the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency and the Northern Ireland Organised Crime Taskforce, which is responsible for coordinating operations against organised crime in Northern Ireland.

Background

SOCA formally came into being on 1 April 2006 following a merger of the National Crime Squad, the National Criminal Intelligence Service, the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU), the investigative and intelligence sections of HM Revenue & Customs on serious drug trafficking, and the Immigration Service's responsibilities for organised immigration crime. The Serious Fraud Office remains as a separate agency.

The creation of the agency was announced on 9 February 2004 as one of the elements of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005, which also restricts protests and demonstrations in central London, and alters powers of arrest and the use of search warrants.Parallels have been drawn between the organisation and the Federal Bureau of Investigation of the United States: indeed, parts of the press have labelled SOCA as the "British FBI." [1] The duties and functions of SOCA, however, are more akin to that of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Additionally, comparisons with the FBI and ICE are not strictly accurate due to non-federal nature of the United Kingdom constitution, and the completely different structure of policing. Police forces will continue to deal with most crime whilst SOCA will assist forces and also work independently with regards to serious organised crime. SOCA is an intelligence agency which has the role of "reducing harm", not specifically the arrest and conviction of offenders.

SOCA does not deal with issues of national security and does not have a counter terrorism or counter intelligence role like the FBI. The Security Service MI5 and Scotland Yard Counter Terrorism Command are the lead national units in this area[2] . Scotland Yard also has important national resources such as the Specialist Crime Directorate which is often involved in major national and international criminal investigations.[3] Other important national agencies include the National Policing Improvement Agency which provides analysis and support to law enforcement agencies and the Forensic Science Service which is a national scientific resource, along with the Laboratory of Goverment Chemist (LGC Forensics). Major White Collar Crime, Corruption and Fraud investigations both at home and abroad are headed by the City of London Police [4] and Serious Fraud Office.

There has been criticism of SOCA Officers shouting 'Stop Armed Police' in order to apprehend armed subjects by the Police Federation of England and Wales, as SOCA officers are not police officers. However SOCA has argued that the term SOCA or Serious Organised Crime Agency may not be understood by criminals and that 'Stop Armed Police' is universally understood. [5] Unlike the FBI who have a Hostage Rescue Team, SOCA does not deal with Armed Hostage Situations, such incidents in the UK are generally dealt with by the Metropolitan Police Specialist Firearms Command and the Special Air Service Anti-Terrorism Team.[6] [7]

Former National Crime Squad detective Peter Blekesley said SOCA "needs to be elite. It needs to be secretive to a certain degree. To catch people in the highest echelon of organised crime needs a lot of dedication, a lot of expertise, a lot of officers who are multi-skilled, and devotion to the task. It's not an easy thing to take out the top people who are top of the criminal pile."[8]

SOCA is subject to similar internal and external safeguards as the police service. The SOCA Professional Standards Department is responsible for receiving, investigating and monitoring the progress of public complaints about the misconduct of SOCA officers. Serious complaints regarding SOCA are dealt with by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC)[9].The IPCC will decide the appropriate method of investigation. In general terms, the IPCC will handle complaints against SOCA officers in the same manner as complaints against Police Officers or officers of HMRC. The Police Ombudsman of Northern Ireland (PONI) will deal with complaints in Northern Ireland. In Scotland, this will be the responsibility of the Lord Advocate. There will also be a bespoke inspection regime for SOCA, provided through Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC). [10] SOCA has a UK-wide remit, but will work in partnership with agencies in Scotland and Northern Ireland. [11]

According to Home Office figures Organised Crime costs the UK around £20 billion each year, with some estimates putting the figure as high as £40 billion.[12]

Administration

The agency is an executive non-departmental public body sponsored by, but operationally independent from, the Home Office. It is funded by central government, with a provisional budget for 2006/7 of £457m, of which £416m funds on-going resources and £41m is capital investment.[13]. It will have around 4,200 employees, of which 400 are backroom staff. Of the remaining workforce, half will be criminal investigators and the other half will focus on analysis and intelligence. SOCA will co-operate closely with the police, intelligence agencies, HM Revenue and Customs, foreign police forces and others. From April 2008, the Assets Recovery Agency is to become part of SOCA.

It is led by a board with 11 members. The non-executive chairman, responsible for the overall approach of SOCA, is Sir Stephen Lander, a former head of MI5. The other non-executive directors of the board are Stephen Barrett, Elizabeth France, Ken Jarrold, Janet Paraskeva and General Sir Roger Wheeler. Day-to-day leadership is provided by the Director General, Bill Hughes, who is able to designate SOCA officers as having the powers of a police constable, a customs officer, or an immigration officer. The other executive directors of the board are David Bolt, Malcolm Cornberg, Paul Evans and Trevor Pearce.[14] The agency's headquarters are in Vauxhall, South London, not far from Westminster and the SIS Building.[15]

The board has decided that around 40% of its effort should be devoted to combating drug trafficking, 25% to tackling organised immigration crime, around 10% to fraud, 15% on other organised crime and the remaining 10% on supporting other law enforcement agencies.[16]

The organisation has been split up into four directorates: intervention (finding ways to obstruct organised criminals); intelligence (building up a detailed picture of organised crime gangs); enforcement (investigating organised crime gangs); and corporate services (the administrative back up to the operational side).

Intelligence Role and Secrecy

SOCA operates from at least 40 offices across the UK. SOCA officers are empowered to perform a number of surveillance roles traditionally associated with British intelligence services such as MI5, although, unlike MI5 officers, some designated SOCA officers enjoy powers of arrest. SOCA is exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act.

National Central Bureau

SOCA acts as the UK point of contact for Interpol, Europol and the Schengen Information System.

In this capacity SOCA maintains the following functions:

  • Single point of contact for International enquiries from SOCA and all UK Police and law enforcement agencies.
  • 24/7 capacity for Interpol with direct connections to their databases and provides a specialist service to Europol through our Europol Liaison Officers.
  • Coordination of all inbound and outbound Cross Border Surveillance requests with Schengen partners.
  • Dedicated Fugitives Unit that acts as the UK Central Authority for all European Arrest Warrants (EAW).

Money laundering

SOCA takes over responsibility for dealing with suspicious activity reports (SARs), previously made to NCIS under the money laundering legislation. NCIS received just under 200,000 SARs in 2005. Despite criticism from professional representative bodies that the disclosure rules are too broad, SOCA has said that up to one in three SARs lead to or add substantially to terrorism investigations; that HMRC estimates that around one in five SARs identifies new subjects of interest, and one in four SARs lead to direct tax enquiries; and that many arrests and confiscations of criminal assets.[17]

Subject to the passing of the necessary legislation, the Assets Recovery Agency will become part of the Serious Organised Crime Agency from April 2008. Both ARA and SOCA are committed to maintaining their efforts in the recovery of criminal assets during the transition. The power to launch civil recovery proceedings has been extended to the three main prosecutors in England and Wales; the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), the Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office (RCPO) and the Serious Fraud Office (SFO). It will also be extended to the Public Prosecution Service in Northern Ireland and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service in Scotland. [18]

Child Protection

The Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) is technically part of SOCA and its officers are SOCA officers. However, CEOP largely operates separately to the bulk of SOCA. The task of online child protection had previously been (in part) the responsibility of the NHTCU. CEOP recently announced the opening of the CEOP Academy, designed to be a centre of excellence in this area of law enforcement. [19] CEOP works in conjunction with New Scotland Yard Child Abuse Investigation Command which has its own hi-tech unit. [20]

Computer crime

Officers from the former National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU) became SOCA's e-crime unit. However, the remit of this unit is much narrower than that of the body it replaced. In particular, the NHTCU had established a confidentiality charter to encourage victims of computer crime to contact the police in confidence, because many corporate victims in particular do not report attacks due to fears of bad publicity. The loss of the confidentiality charter has been widely criticised. [21][22] The Metropolitan Police has plans bridge the gap left by the disbandment of the NHTCU through an expansion of its Computer Unit and the formation of a National E-Crime Coordination Unit. [23]

See also

External links

References

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