Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Command
This article's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. (March 2017) |
The Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Command is a unit within the Gangs and Organised Crime group of Specialist Crime & Operations within London's Metropolitan Police Service. The unit's main responsibility is to both investigate and take steps to prevent fraud, along with a wide range of other fraudulent crimes which require specialist knowledge and training to investigate.[1] The unit was previously known as the fraud squad, or by its previous Specialist Operations designation, SO6.
History
[edit]Formed in 1946,[1] the unit was originally known as Metropolitan and City Police Fraud Department or "C6 Branch". It was the first integrated cross-border, co-operative unit set up jointly between London's two police services; the City of London Police due to their expertise in business and stock market fraud, and the Metropolitan Police with their investigative experience.
The increasing complexity of business fraud as time progressed, and hence the lessened chances of securing a successful prosecution, saw the implementation of the Serious Fraud Office in 1987. Due to the Serious Fraud Office making C6 obsolete, the City of London Police and the Metropolitan Police reverted to having their own Fraud Squads. The MPS' was then called SO6. Staffed by about 140 detectives, specialised teams within the Squad included the Commercial Crimes Intelligence Bureau, a Financial Investigations Unit, the Fraud Prevention Office, a Surveillance Unit, a Crime Management Unit and a fledgling Computer Crime Unit.[1]
In October 2000, the Fraud Squad was renamed Economic and Specialist Crime as part of the Specialist Crime Directorate, and its remit was expanded substantially to cover a wider range of financial and economic crime and fraud. Several other autonomous units, such as the Arts and Antiquities Squad, were merged with the new unit. The Proactive Money Laundering Investigation Team, formed in 2003, has a remit to deal with high-level money laundering, and also are active in removing substantial amounts of criminal cash from the organised criminal networks working in and around London.[1]
Structure
[edit]The Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Command is made up of several teams and sub-units:[2]
- Art and Antiques Unit
- The Branch Intelligence Unit
- The Criminal Finance Team (CFT)
- The Dedicated Cheque and Plastic Crime Unit
- The Extradition and International Assistance Units
- The Financial Investigation Development Unit
- The Flying Squad
- The Fraud Squads
- Project Genesius
- The Kidnap Unit
- The London Regional Asset Recovery Team (London RART)
- Operation Maxim
- Middle Market Drugs Partnership
- Operation Nexus
- The Police Central e-crime Unit (PCeU)
- The Proactive Money Laundering Taskforce (PMLT)
- The Projects Team
- Operation Sterling
- The Stolen Vehicle Unit (SVU)
- The Trafficking and Prostitution Unit
- The Special Intelligence Section (SIS)[3][4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Metropolitan Police Service – Specialist Crime Directorate". Met.police.uk. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
- ^ Metropolitan Police: Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Linked 27 February 2015
- ^ UNODC (2010). "Organized crime involvement in trafficking in persons and smuggling of migrants" (PDF). UNODC Issue Paper.
- ^ "£100m cocaine gang sentenced to 200 years in prison". the Guardian. 5 January 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2022.