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Putting the Drugs Business

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Established 1999 to co-ordinate the activity of supply side agencies ... Improved targeting and co-ordination. NIM and improved support for CIDA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Putting the Drugs Business


1
  • Putting the Drugs Business
  • Out of Business

2
CIDA and CICFAConcerted Inter-agency
ActionPaul Evans, Director InvestigationHMCE
Law Enforcement
3
What is CIDA?
  • Concerted Inter-Agency Drugs Action Group
  • Established 1999 to co-ordinate the activity of
    supply side agencies
  • Supported by a multi-agency Secretariat
  • Aims to increase the impact of supply side
    interventions to reduce crime
  • Delivery Strategy

4
Who?
NCS
PMDU
ACPO
NCIS
HMCE
SDEA
Security Services
Home Office
Foreign Office
Cabinet Office
5
Why a Delivery Strategy?
  • Difficulties in meeting specific targets
  • Ministerial interest and review by the PMDU
  • New challenge through new PSA target
  • Move away from traditional output measures
  • Focus on outcomes specifically achieving a
    sustained impact on the availability of Class A
    drugs in the UK
  • Harm reduction

6
The scale of the problem
  • Up to 300,000 problem drug users in the UK
  • Committing substantial amounts of crime to fund
    their habit
  • Over half of all crime is drug related or
    motivated
  • Estimates for drug-related crime are up to 19bn
    each year
  • Additional impact on health services and on
    communities
  • Successful UK importation estimate per year
  • 40 tonnes Cocaine
  • 25-30 tonnes Heroin

7
Routes
To Europe 15
To Europe 15-20
Heroin 100 tonnes
Heroin 350 tonnes
Cocaine 700 tonnes
Cocaine seizures en route 20-25
Heroin seizures en route 15
8
The drugs trafficking business is innovative and
flexible
Flexibility
  • High. Groups respond quickly innovatively to
    interventions

Constant adaptation
  • A combination of flexibility, new participants
    innovation has enabled traffickers to maintain a
    steady flow of drugs

New participants
  • Inexhaustible with high replacement rates

Innovative
  • Technological sophistication counter
    intelligence etc.

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The challenge is for law enforcement to adapt
  • Diversity and flexibility of trafficking groups,
    and their rapid response to interventions, is a
    major challenge
  • Only by ensuring effective, coordinated action
    can we make a lasting impact on trafficking
    groups
  • Law enforcement needs to evolve as quickly as the
    problem were tackling
  • End to End Attack

16
Joint HMCE/NCS operation 2003/4 Homespun/Freeze
400kgs Heroin
17
400kgs Heroin concealed in cat litter imported
from Turkey
18
6 charged, two guilty pleas -currently at trial
19
The CIDA Delivery Strategy
Overarching Principles
  • Need for more sophisticated understanding of how
    the market works
  • From production, through transit to consumption
    in our communities and understanding the impact
  • More effective co-ordination of activity
  • Between supply side agencies and
  • With demand side partners
  • Better targeted activity achieving the biggest
    bang for our buck
  • Clear focus on harm reduction

20
Setting clear objectives
  • Enhance our knowledge and understanding
  • Increase the risks to traffickers and dealers
  • Reduce production and processing
  • Stifle drug markets nationally and
    internationally
  • Disrupt supply networks
  • Targeting people, powder and finances
  • Achieving a sustained impact

21
Key Tasks
  • Measurement of impact
  • Constructing outcome measures
  • Improved targeting and co-ordination
  • NIM and improved support for CIDA
  • Prioritising activity across supply networks
  • Action plans based on strategic assessment
  • Testing the approach
  • Piloting an end-to-end approach
  • Street Level Up
  • MMDP London

22
Middle Market Drugs Project
19 arrests resulting in the seizure of 81 kilos
of cocaine 1 Kilo of crack cocaine 4 kilos of
heroin 50 kilos of cannabis 25,000 in cash
23
Assessing the impact
  • Focus on harm reduction requires a new approach
  • Insufficient to focus purely on traditional
    outputs though these will continue to be
    important measures of activity
  • Assessment will be on three levels
  • Overarching Drug Harms Index, being developed by
    HO
  • Enhanced output measures people, money, powder
  • A new Supply Impact Measure

24
What will success look like?
  • We expect that success will result in
  • Declining levels of purity
  • Gradual reductions in perceptions of availability
  • Long-term increases in price/short-term price
    volatility
  • Short-term success may have negative impacts
  • Increase in acquisitive crime
  • Longer-term, success should be clear-cut
  • Including getting more people into treatment
  • Australia and Heroin

25
Building the picture
  • Still gaps in our knowledge of the market and how
    it works
  • Need to have a better understanding to improve
    the targeting of our activity
  • E.g. on choke-points or key vulnerabilities
  • Re-orientation towards harm reduction means need
    for more specific/prioritised intelligence
    collection
  • Intelligence is also a benefit in its own right
    not just a means towards an operational end

26
Testing the approach
  • Final strand of activity brings the separate
    elements together, to test the overall approach
  • Using intelligence to improve our understanding
    of the market and to drive activity
  • Assessing the impact of interventions
  • Prioritising activity to meet greatest threats
  • Piloting the Street Level Up approach
  • Four pilot areas, multi-agency approach
  • Targeted interventions, learning lessons

27
Agencies are already working together to meet the
challenge
  • Some recent successes
  • Operation Airbridge
  • Interventions in South America
  • Capacity building in Afghanistan
  • Proceeds of Crime Act
  • Simultaneous interventions at different levels
  • Focus on harm reduction

28
Operation Airbridge
  • Partnership between HMCE, Jamaican LE, UK Police,
    NCIS and supported by both Governments
  • Interdiction outbound at Jamaican airports by the
    Jamaican Constabulary Force (JCF), supported by
    UK Customs, Police NCIS
  • This has cut cocaine smuggling by ingestion from
    Jamaica direct to the UK

29
Results
  • Jamaica In excess of 300 detections since the
    operation began in 2002
  • UK Detection decreased by more than 75
  • Increased the cost and risk to smuggling
    organisations

30
Go fasts
  • Colombia to Jamaica 15 - 24 hours.
  • 700 - 1500 kg pay load.

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Getting them to stop
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Cash and the drugs business
  • The trafficking of drugs generates significant
    volumes of cash
  • which then needs to be repatriated and
    legitimised
  • Managing cash flows is vital to traffickers
  • rely on current sales to pay for future imports
  • rely on proceeds to pay debts
  • The most challenging tasks are
  • getting cash into the legitimate financial system
  • moving cash across borders

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Operation Undulating
37

38
CICFA
  • The CICFA Working group works in support of the
    Multi Agency Assets Recovery Delivery Plan
  • The Government has a Manifesto commitment to
    double the amount of recovered assets receipts
    from 29.5m in 1999/2000 to 60m in 2004/5
  • Targets for the amount of recovered assets have
    been increased and are 80m in 2004/5 and 100m
    in 2005/6 currently on track

39
CICFA membership
  • Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO)
  • Association of Chief Police Officers (Scotland)
  • Police Service Northern Ireland (PSNI)
  • H M Customs Excise
  • National Crime Squad (NCS)
  • National Criminal Intelligence Service (NCIS)
  • Home Office
  • Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)
  • Inland Revenue
  • Assets Recovery Agency (ARA)
  • Department of Constitutional Affairs (DCA)
  • Confiscation Enforcement Taskforce.

40
CICFA role
  • A multi agency group for step change.
  • Personal commitment of the heads of the main
    LEAs.
  • Full impact of POCA demands concerted activity in
    a single strategy.
  • Its about crime reduction.

41
Results
  • Tin box receipts FY 03/04
  • 54.5 million
  • 1350 confiscation orders obtained FY 03/04
  • 72.77 million
  • Total cash seizures 31/12/02 to 31/03/04
  • 63 million

42
Where next?
  • The strategy is a starting point, rather than an
    end point
  • developing our understanding of the market and to
    respond to it in an intelligent way
  • The strategy will not deliver improved
    performance by itself
  • But it will enable us to work more effectively
    together to achieve a step change in performance
  • Need to ensure ongoing development
  • Markets will continue to change adapt, we
    cant afford to stand still

43
Any Questions?
44
  • Putting the Drugs Business
  • Out of Business

45
Ministerial AddressCaroline Flint
MPParliamentary Under SecretaryAnti Drugs
Co-OrdinationandOrganised Crime
46
  • Putting the Drugs Business
  • Out of Business

47
Plenary SessionChaired byNeil Bennett
48
  • Putting the Drugs Business
  • Out of Business

49
Conference CloseAndy HaymanChief Constable,
Norfolk ConstabularyChair of ACPO Drugs Committee
50
  • Putting the Drugs Business
  • Out of Business
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