26. Written evidence from the
National Crime Squad
POLICE SERVICE, CRIME AND ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR IN
WALES
1. INTRODUCTION
The National Crime Squad (NCS) is tasked with
combating national and international serious and organised crime
within, or affecting, England and Wales. This is achieved through
the selective targeting of offenders and organised crime
enterprises, exploiting every opportunity to prevent and reduce the
destructive impact of their criminal activity on communities and the
fabric of society.
Formed in 1998, the NCS is a Non-Departmental Public
Body. Responsibility for the accountability, management and
supervision of the organisation is vested in three entities: the
Director General, the Home Secretary and the Service Authority.
Operational direction lies with the Director General, supported by a
Deputy Director General, two Assistant Chief Constables, a Director
of Finance and a Director of Business Support. The organisation is
staffed by police officers from the 43 police forces of England and
Wales, as well as police officers who have been directly employed
under the Police Reform Act, and directly employed police staff who
perform both operational and support roles. The organisation aims to
have approximately 1,800 staff, including separately funded national
functions. NCS Headquarters are in London, with three Operational
Command Units (OCUs)—Northern, Eastern and Western—covering the
whole of England and Wales. Each OCU consists of a number of branch
offices where operational teams are based. The NCS also encompasses
multi-agency units tasked with addressing specific areas of
criminality, such as the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU).
On 1 April 2006, the NCS will form a central part of
the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), as a result of the
Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill currently going through
Parliament.
2. THE NCS IN WALES
The NCS has three branch offices in Wales. Each of
these branch offices are staffed by experienced detectives, the
majority of whom are currently seconded from local police forces.
These officers are supported by specialist police staff, who provide
intelligence analysis, financial investigation and technical and
administrative support. The branch offices have made a significant
impact on serious and organised criminality in or affecting Wales
through the dismantling and disruption of organised crime
enterprises. Over the last three years alone, the NCS in Wales has
achieved the following results:
— Seven major organised crime enterprises—all
connected to the trade in Class A drugs or organised immigration
crime—have been completely dismantled.
— Significant seizures of Class A drugs (157
kilograms of cocaine and ecstasy), together with over two metric
tonnes of other drugs, (such as cannabis and amphetamine).
— 139 arrests of organised criminals, the majority
of whom reside in and/or impact on the Welsh market. In the last
three years, the majority of these main targets have been based in
Wales, although they have all had many associates and contacts in
the UK, Europe and internationally.
— The NCS in Wales has identified to the Courts
that these organised crime enterprises have accrued benefits
through their drug dealing to the approximate value of £28
million. £7 million of criminal assets have been identified and
over £1.5 million has already been confiscated.
Furthermore, the NCS is working hard to support Welsh
police forces in tackling cross-border crime at Level 2 of the
National Intelligence Model (NIM), particularly as part of Operation
TARIAN. NCS personnel in both north and south Wales are permanent
members of the Regional Tasking and Co-ordinating Group (RTCG),
which is responsible for addressing NIM Level 2 criminality within
Wales. The RTCG in this region has also developed a Regional Task
Force (RTF) as its operational arm, which the NCS is fully involved
in supporting (see Operation CYAN below, for example).
3. RECENT OPERATIONS
To illustrate the effectiveness, challenges and
variety of the work of the NCS in Wales, outlined below is a precis
of a number of operations over recent years:
Operation CONGLOMERATE (organised illegal immigration)
Operation CONGLOMERATE was an investigation into an
organised crime enterprise headed by a Bulgarian national residing
in Swansea on a false passport. The group was responsible for the
exploitation of young Bulgarian women for the purpose of
prostitution in massage parlours in both Wales and London.
Following extensive enquiries by the NCS and the UK
Immigration Service, the ringleaders were arrested and subsequently
deported to Bulgaria.
Operation CYAN (Class A drugs)
This was an operation investigating an organised
crime enterprise based in Lancaster and Bridgend supplying large
quantities of cocaine and ecstasy into the south Wales market. An
early breakthrough led to the arrest of the Lancaster supplier, and
subsequent enquiries identified a large network of Level 2 dealers
and suppliers throughout the Neath, Port Talbot and Bridgend Valley
regions. Consultation with the RTF management resulted in an
agreement that the NCS would provide the RTF with all the
intelligence and evidence it had amassed during its investigation.
This enabled the RTF to execute 20 search warrants, which in turn
led to 18 arrests and the recovery of both Class A and B drugs to
the value £180,000 and £160,000, as well as cash seizures.
In October 2004, 12 members of this organised
criminal enterprise were sentenced to a total of 60 years
imprisonment at Swansea Crown Court. The two principal members of
the group were jailed for 12 and 10 years imprisonment each.
The net result of this collaboration was a
considerable local impact in the communities concerned, with some
local residents telephoning the local Divisional Commander to
congratulate the police on taking such positive action. Community
intelligence indicated a shortage of drugs on the streets for some
time afterwards. The RTF were also commended for Operation CYAN by
the Home Office, "Tackling the Middle Market" at the Tackling Drug
Supply Awards 2004.
Operation EUREKA (Class A & B drugs)
Operation EUREKA was launched in May 2001 after
liaison with colleagues in the National Criminal Intelligence
Service (NCIS). The operation was a long-term investigation into the
criminal activities of Bernard William Rees. Rees was a major
criminal in Wales who controlled an organised crime enterprise of
both national and international significance. Rees had been
sentenced in 1993 to a term of 13 years imprisonment for offences of
importation and conspiracy to supply cocaine. He was released from
prison in May 2001 on licence, whereupon NCS officers mounted
Operation EUREKA into his drug distribution network. Rees'
organisation was responsible for the wholesale distribution of both
Class A and B controlled drugs. A significant and pivotal figure in
this organisation was Martin Barnes, a prominent South Wales
businessman. Officers mounted an extensive surveillance operation
and gathered evidence as members of the gang met in car parks and
other venues to set up major drug deals. The organisation dealt in
cocaine, heroin, amphetamine sulphate, crack-cocaine and ecstasy.
The network was dismantled when officers made a string of arrests
between January and May 2002 and seized drugs worth up to £1
million, as well as £15,000 in cash. Half a kilo of cocaine was
recovered, one of the largest such seizures in 2002 in south Wales,
along with 30 kilos of amphetamine sulphate, a replica pistol and
six live 9mm rounds of ammunition.
12 men were sentenced to over 80 years imprisonment
following their convictions at Cardiff Crown Court on 7 May 2003.
The principal defendants, Rees and Barnes, were sentenced as
follows:
— Bernard William Rees was convicted of conspiracy
to supply cocaine and two counts of conspiracy to supply
amphetamine. He was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. In
addition, the Judge ordered that he be recalled to complete an
outstanding three and a half years imprisonment for a previous
conviction (conspiracy to supply cocaine) in 1993, when he was
sentenced 13 years imprisonment, but released in 2001 on
license.
— Martin Barnes was convicted of two counts of
conspiracy to supply cocaine, two counts of conspiracy to supply
amphetamine, one count of possessing amphetamine with intent to
supply, one count of supplying cocaine and one count of supplying
heroin. He was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
Judge Richards commended all of the NCS officers and
staff involved in Operation EUREKA, stating that, "The public is
indebted to the NCS, and if not for their arrests of the accused
persons, the cocaine and amphetamine seized would have hit the
streets of South Wales".
To demonstrate the commitment to ensure that major
criminals do not profit from their criminal enterprises, the NCS
applied to the High Court in London, and won a legal ruling to
confiscate the proceeds of drug trafficking dating back to an Order
made 10 years ago at Cardiff Crown Court. In October 1993, a
Confiscation Order for £142,243 was made against Bernard William
Rees after he was jailed for 13 years for supplying cocaine. Rees
failed to satisfy the Order and receivers were brought in to
identify and seize his assets, including properties in Spain,
Cardiff, and a 50% stake in his marital home in Cardiff. However,
before his conviction in 1993, Rees and his wife Margaret divorced
and she later filed an affidavit, which claimed the majority of the
assets belonged to her alone. The NCS contested the affidavit, and
after the High Court had ruled in its favour, it lifted a
restriction on the Receiver, allowing the realisation of the assets
over 10 years later.
Operation NEVADA (kidnap response)
Operation NEVADA involved NCS officers traveling to
Spain to assist North Wales Police and the Spanish authorities in
the investigation into missing couple Linda and Tony O'Malley, from
Llangollen. The couple had visited Spain in August 2002 with a view
to buying property in the Costa Blanca area, and were reported
missing when they failed to return home. The NCS established a full
kidnap response control centre in consultation with North Wales
Police, and subsequently managed negotiations after receiving e-mail
and telephone demands for money.
On 25 March 2003, Spanish police arrested four people
after technical inquiries significantly progressed the
investigation. Tragically, the decomposed bodies of Mr and Mrs
O'Malley were later found in the cellar of a villa in the north of
Alicante.
Operation ORE (paedophilia)
The Paedophile On-Line Investigation Team (POLIT) is
one of several specialised units within the NCS, and is charged with
the investigation of on-line paedophilia, including the UK
co-ordination of the now publicised Operation ORE. This operation
started when, in 2001, the details of 7,272 British suspects who had
accessed child abuse images on a US website with their credit cards
were passed to UK authorities. Operation ORE subsequently became the
largest ever single investigation into online activity of this
nature. UK law enforcement was unprepared for the sheer volume and
proliferation of child abuse images on the net, which resulted in
the NCS being asked to review Operation ORE on behalf of the
Association of Chief Police Officers, the Home Office and the wider
UK law enforcement community.
The resultant recommendations called for a process
whereby a single team would receive, evaluate, risk assess and
disseminate material relating to national and international
internet-related child abuse. Regional forces would then use their
expertise in investigation and intervention. POLIT was thus
established in 2002, becoming the single point of contact for
domestic and international law enforcement, as well as the
administrative support for operational tasking and co-ordination.
Since January 2004, POLIT has handled a total of 2,782 intelligence
packages, including those from the USA, Norway, Canada and Germany.
Operation ORE has had a significant impact in Wales:
68 suspects were charged with offences, of which 62 were convicted.
Of these, 39 were sentenced and 11 were cautioned. 18 known abusers
were removed, 40 additional child abuse investigations were
generated and—perhaps most importantly—six children were recovered
from abuse. 318 computers were examined in the course of
enquiries.
4. PARTNERSHIP WORKING
Success on this scale is not achieved by operating in
isolation, and the NCS are proud of the fact that it has an
excellent working relationship with many other partner law
enforcement agencies, both domestic and foreign. For example, Her
Majesty's Customs and Excise, NCIS and UKIS within the UK, as well
as the Australian Federal Police, the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police from overseas.
The NCS also work extensively with several
governmental departments, the security and intelligence agencies, as
well as both the private and voluntary sectors. It is at the
forefront of developing an innovative organised crime reduction
strategy, with such partnerships forming a key pillar of the
organisation's ability to proactively create obstacles to prevent
organised criminals going about their business.
5. CONCLUSION
The NCS in Wales are currently conducting several
operations which have an impact on Wales. These operations are in
various stages of development and are all concentrated upon
organised criminals who operate at NIM Level 3. Other specialised
units of the NCS, such as the NHTCU and POLIT, have provided Welsh
police forces with assistance to combat NIM Level 2 criminality in
Wales. The NCS also on occasions provide specialist training to
Welsh territorial police forces.
The NCS remains committed to continue, in partnership
with local forces, its fight against organised crime in Wales.
Whilst there are many challenges ahead for the organisation, notably
in the transition to SOCA in 2006, the Director General is committed
to maintaining and where possible improving upon the excellent
performance that has already been achieved by the NCS in Wales.
Trevor Pearce
Director General (Acting)
7 December 2004
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