SYTECH – Dale Cregan admits father and son murders in Greater Manchester

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 64872519 david mark SYTECH   Dale Cregan admits father and son murders in Greater Manchester
David Short (left) was killed at his home in August, with his son Mark shot dead in May
 

Police killer Dale Cregan has admitted the murders of a father and son in Greater Manchester.

 

Mark Short, 23, was shot in a pub in Droylsden in May 2012. His father David, 46, was killed in a gun and grenade attack in Clayton last August.

 

Cregan, 29, has now admitted four murders including those of PCs Fiona Bone and Nicola Hughes.

 

Simon Csoka QC told the jury at Preston Crown Court his client “is going to die in prison”.

 

The trial heard how David Short was fatally injured when Cregan and Anthony Wilkinson attacked him at his home on 10 August.

 

Weeks earlier, on 25 May, Cregan had shot dead Mark Short while he played pool in the Cotton Tree pub.

 

Shortly after the trial started he admitted the murders of the two Greater Manchester Police officers in Abbey Gardens, Mottram, in September last year.

 

The jury heard how Cregan lured PCs Bone and Hughes to a house before shooting them repeatedly and then throwing a grenade.

 

Four murders

Earlier in court, Cregan offered guilty pleas to the attempted murder of three men in the pub attack – John Collins, Ryan Pridding and Michael Belcher.

 

He also admitted causing an explosion, but denies the attempted murder of Sharon Hark.

 

 67748122 65874114 SYTECH   Dale Cregan admits father and son murders in Greater Manchester
Dale Cregan, 29, has now admitted four murders including those of PCs Fiona Bone and Nicola Hughes
 

In his closing speech, Mr Csoka said: “You now know for sure that he has murdered four people and that he has attempted to murder others inside the Cotton Tree pub.

 

“Ordinarily in a closing speech the defence barrister will tell you how important your task is, how it makes so much difference, how the liberty of the defendant hangs in the balance.

 

“All of those words mean nothing now, absolutely nothing.

 

“He is going to be sentenced for four murders and three attempted murders. He is not going anywhere. He is going to die in prison.”

 

Nine co-defendants

It is alleged by the Crown the violence first started after a “long-standing feud” between two rival Manchester families – the Shorts and the Atkinsons.

 

The court previously heard the pub shooting was ordered by Leon Atkinson, 35, from Ashton-under-Lyne, and that Cregan recruited Luke Livesey, 27, from Hattersley.

 

Damian Gorman, 37, from Glossop, Ryan Hadfield, 28, from Droylsden, and Matthew James, 33, from Clayton, were also recruited for the task.

 

They all deny the murder of Mark Short and the attempted murders of Mr Collins, Mr Pridding and Mr Belcher.

 

In April, Anthony Wilkinson, 34, changed his plea to guilty over the murder of David Short.

 

He denies one count of the attempted murder of Sharon Hark and causing an explosion with a hand grenade.

 

Francis Dixon, 37, from Stalybridge, and Jermaine Ward, 24, deny the above charges relating to David Short and Sharon Hark.

 

Mohammed Ali, 23, from Chadderton, denies assisting an offender.

The Investigator – Digital Online Magazine.

SYTECH Evidence – Dale Cregan trial: Simon Lang gives evidence on SatNav GPS usage for GMP – Mancunian Matters

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Welcome to day 23 of the Dale Cregan murder trial from Preston Crown Court. MM will be posting live updates throughout the day.

 

13.01pm Justice Holroyd dismisses the jury until at least 10.30am on Wednesday. It is not yet certain whether the jury will be required at that time, but jurors will certainly be required by Thursday at the latest. MM’s live blog will return once the court is in session later in the week.

13.00pm Mr Holland has completed his questioning, and Mr Lang has completed his evidence. He leaves the witness stand.

12.55pm Prosecutors claim Ali was in Leeds, at the Gotts Road address, on August 11. Despite no sat nav evidence, cell site analysis have located Ali’s attributed phone in this area on that evening, the court hears.

12.53pm Mr Lang confirms the sat nav contained ten further visits within five miles of Leeds city centre and 27 visits within five miles of Bradford city centre, but none were to significant addresses.

12.44pm Mr Clarke has completed his questioning, and Rick Holland, representing Ali, is now cross-examining Mr Lang.

12.43pm The sat nav made no journeys to Leeds outside of the days discussed, Mr Lang confirms, after examining 207 ‘recoverable journeys’ stored on the device. No journeys at all were made on August 17, August 18 and August 19, he tells the court.

12.41pm Mr Lang, comparing the journey to cell site data analysed from Ali’s attributed phone, confirms a third ‘direct correlation’ between the movements of both devices, the court hear.

12.36pm The jury are told that GPS data shows the sat nav switched on at 11.09 at TK Maxx in Oldham, and heading to an address around Knowsley Street, Bradford, where it arrives at 11.49am.

At 11.58am, the sat nav then journeys to the Faroe Buildings, Gotts Road, Leeds, arriving at 12.16pm, before leaving the address at 12.26pm and arriving at a McDonald’s near Bradford at 12.43pm.

After three minutes, it moved back to the Knowsley Street address, Bradford, where it was turned off at 12.51pm. It then journeyed to North Road, Clayton, between 12.57pm and 13.50pm, before being turned off at an Esso garage, Rochdale Road, Oldham, at 14.38pm. Turned back on five minutes later, it then recorded travelling to Radcliffe Street, Oldham, and was switched off at 15.02pm.

12.19pm Mr Lang is now demonstrating to the jury movements of Ali’s attributed sat nav on August 16, in comparison to cell site usage of Ali’s attributed telephone.

12.12pm The jury are back in, and proceedings have resumed, with questioning still revolving around comparisons of cell site analysis and GPS data from August 15.

11.57am Judge Mr Justice Holroyde has sent the jury for a 15-minute break. Mr Lang’s evidence will resume upon their return.

11.55am Cell site analysis had also showed Ali’s attributed phone journeying from Oldham to Leeds on the same morning.

11.54am Mr Lang is demonstrating the correlation by running through cell site analysis showing the movement’s of Ali’s attributed telephone on August 15.

11.48am The court hear that Ali’s attributed sat nav was turned on at 11.15am in Leeds on August 15, where it travelled to the White Rose pub, in south Leeds, before leaving at 12.03pm to a Leeds McDonalds.

It then travelled to an address on Gotts Road, Leeds, for 12.30pm, where it was turned off, before being used again in a journey to Bradford between 12.40pm and 13.03pm, where it was switched off on the M606. At 14.01pm, it was turned back on at the Silver Birch pub, Cleckheaton, and travelled to Chappell Street, Oldham for 14.40pm.

After being static for 20 minutes, it then reached the Three Crowns Pub, Oldham at 15.15pm, before being turned off at Chadderton Way, Oldham, at 15.20pm.

Mr Lang tells the court that the GPS usage again correlated with cell site usage.

11.33am Mr Lang is now informing the court of the cell site and sat nav movements of devices attributed to Ali on August 15.

11.31am Mr Lang tells the jury that Ali’s sat nav system was switched off completely on August 11, 12, 13, and 14.

11.25am Cell site analysis is helping to fill any gaps in which the sat nav was switched off. Usage of Ali’s attributed telephone between 7.24pm and 7.27pm shows the device further up the M62 than when the sat nav was switched off at 7.15pm, the court hears.

11.18am Mr Lang is comparing the sat nav data with the cell site analysis of Ali’s attributed mobile telephone, which was revealed last week. Mr Lang tells the court there is a ‘direct correlation’ between the two.

11.15am The sat nav was static for 17 minutes, before travelling to an address on St. Kilda’s Avenue, Droylsden, at 6.11pm where it was switched off for 11 minutes. It then travelled to Press to Impress, Failsworth, reaching the destination at 6.32pm and remaining static for three minutes before heading to an address on Mona Road, Chadderton, where it was static between 6.50pm and 6.54pm.

The device then was recorded journeying towards Bradford on the M62, and was switched off at 7.15pm near the M62’s junction with the A640. It was switched back on again at 8.06pm, in Bradford, with the sat nav returning to Ali’s home address in Oldham for 8.36pm.

At 8.39pm, the device left Gainsborough Avenue, and journeyed to the Waggon and Horses pub, in Hawkshaw, reaching the destination at 9.12pm, where it was static until 11.32pm. The device then travelled back to Gainsborough Avenue, reaching the address at 11.59pm, where it was switched off.

11.05am Mr Lang is demonstrating to the court the journey taken by Ali’s alleged sat nav from the moment it was switched on at 5.38pm.

11.01am Mr Lang tells the court that Ali’s satellite navigation system was switched on at 5.38pm on August 10, and was located at his home address in Gainsborough Avenue, Oldham.

11.00am Cell site data shown to the jury last week revealed Ali’s attributed mobile telephone journeyed from Failsworth to Bradford between 11am and 12pm on August 10.

10.55am Mr Lang is explaining to the jury how satellite navigation systems work. The witness was asked by police to examine Mr Ali’s alleged portable sat nav data as part of their investigations.

10.52am Questioning is to focus on the movements of Mohammed Ali on August 10, in relation to his GPS satellite navigation system. Ali is accused of assisting an offender, and prosecutors claim he drove David Short’s killers to Bradford shortly after his murder.

10:51am Today’s first, and only, witness is Simon Lang, a digital forensics expert, who is now being examined by lead prosecutor Nicholas Clarke QC.

10:46am After a short delay for legal discussion, judge, jury, defendants and barristers are all in place, and court one is back in session.

10:15am In place at Preston Crown Court, for day 23 of the trial of Dale Cregan and nine other men. Today should be a short session, with just one witness due to give evidence.

LIVE UPDATES: Dale Cregan murder trial day 23… as it happens | Mancunian Matters.

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SYTECH Evidence – Dale Cregan trial: Simon Lang gives evidence on SatNav GPS usage for GMP – Manchester Evening News

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MEN PA COURTS%20Wanted%20210287 5844983 1302482 SYTECH Evidence – Dale Cregan trial: Simon Lang gives evidence on SatNav GPS usage for GMP   Manchester Evening News
Dale Cregan, front left, and the nine men accused with him sit in the dock flanked by security officers

 

Refresh automatically ON | OFF
 
13:10

The jury is sent home for the day after prosecutor Nicholas Clarke QC says he is not able to present more evidence today

The judge, Mr Justice Holroyde, notes sarcastically that the jury are ##Q##struggling to conceal their disappointment##Q##.

He tells the jury they will not be required on Tuesday as there are ##Q##legal matters##Q## which the barristers must address in their absence, adding further they may not even be required on Wednesday.

The jury is sent home and the trial adjourned until Wednesday at the earliest.

12.2812.39

Mohammed Imran Ali, said to be known to his friends as ##Q##Irish Immie##Q##, knew ##Q##full well##Q## that Dale Cregan, Anthony Wilkinson and Jermaine Ward had murdered David Short, according to the Crown.
He ##Q##ensured they were able to evade the police and leave the Manchester area and he supplied them with essentials that they needed to maintain themselves##Q##, according to the prosecution.

12.28

The Garmin sat nav device then heads south and is back at Gainsborough Avenue in Oldham at 11.59pm.

The following day the device remains switched off, as it does on August 12,13 and 14, says Mr Lang.

However, he refers to a mobile phone which the Crown say is attributed to Mr Ali, telling the court, using cell-site analysis, it is plotted heading from near his home address to Bradford and Leeds city centre on August 11, the day after the gun-and-grenade attack in which Mr Short was killed.

The sat nav device is turned on again in August 15 when it is plotted again heading towards Bradford and then to Leeds around noon, the court is told.

During this journey into Yorkshire the device is plotted at the White Rose pub and at a McDonald##Q##s drive-through restaurant in Leeds and at the Silver Birch Carvery south of Bradford, the jurors are told.

12.17

At 7.15pm the sat nav system leaves the motorway and turns up the A640 where the device is switched off, the court is told.It is switched on again at 8.06pm when it is plotted just south of Bradford, says Mr Lang.

Then the device appears to turn round and heads back towards Manchester, returning to Gainsborough Avenue in Oldham, according to the witness.

At 8.40pm the sat nav system is on the move again and heads north and arrives at the Waggon and Horses pub in the village of Hawkshaw, north of Bury and Bolton, the court is told.

It remains there for two hours and 35 minutes, says Mr Lang.

12.12

The sat nav device was plotted at Gainsborough Avenue in the early evening of August 10, the jury was told.

Later it moved to Press To Impress on Lord Lane in Failsworth.The Crown say this was where Mr Ali picked up the men accused of murdering David Short before taking them to Bradford.

The device arrived at the premises at 6.32pm, remained there for four minutes and then moved off heading north west, the jurors heard.

It was at nearby Mona Road for a few minutes before heading off towards the M62 and then towards Yorkshire, the court heard.

 

12.01

Mr Lang started his evidence by explaining his area of expertise was examining sat nav systems or anything with a microchip in it.

He told the jury he found 207 ##Q##recoverable journey entries##Q## which plotted 59, 956 points on a map during his examination of the sat nav system associated with Mr Ali.

11:08

The jury is now hearing evidence from Simon Lang, an expert in examining satellite navigation systems.

He was asked to examine a Garmin sat nav system associated with the defendant Mohammed Imran Ali.

Mr Ali is said to have transported Dale Cregan, Anthony Wilkinson and Jermaine Ward from Failsowrth to Bradford in his VW Passat after the murder of David Short.

Mr Ali, 23, from Chadderton, denies one charge of assisting an offender.

11:03

The judge, Mr Justice Holroyde, starts by addressing one juror who has sent a note to him asking about a reference on one of the documents they have received which suggested a Mr Webb was a defendant.

The judge makes it clear this was an error. Mr Webb was named earlier in the trial as a man who hired the Salford Van Hire van used in the murder of David Short.

The judge reminds all jurors they must try the defendants before them in the dock and must not speculate about other people named during the case.

10:35

The wigs are gathering in court one. The jury is due shortly for day 23 of the trial.

As it happened: Dale Cregan trial – day 23 – Manchester Evening News.

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Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

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CybercrimeEvent ManhattanDA 590x394 Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance speaks at a symposium called “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ at Pace University in Manhattan on Feb. 28, 2013. Vance said that cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)

You may want to think twice the next time you need money from a curbside ATM, deciding instead to pay for a meal with a credit card.NEW YORK—Prosecutions for cybercrime and identity theft in Manhattan have increased by 50 percent in the last five years, and criminals have been rigging ATM machines and scanning credit cards when no one is looking.

“Cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York, and around the country,” said Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, during a symposium called “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ at Pace University on Feb. 28. “The Manhattan police precincts now record cybercrime and identity theft as their most frequently reported complaints.”

According to Vance, cybercrime is not just a growing trend—it is a fundamental shift in the way modern crime works. Modern crime has already reached a point where nearly every crime in the city involves a cybercomponent.

“It is rare that a case does not involve some kind of cyber or computer element that we prosecute in our office—whether it is homicide, whether it’s a financial crime case, whether it’s a gang case where the gang members are posting on Facebook where they’re going to meet,” said Vance.

The trend is not just small-time crooks acting on their own, either. Many local criminals are working with international hackers—often hired guns in the former Soviet Bloc who can help them con people from the other side of the world. Vance said that organized crime rings are also getting in on the game and are realizing that cybercrime is less risky—yet more lucrative—than even the drug trade.

Fighting Cybercrime

The situation is not all doom and gloom, however, and New York City is helping to lead the way in a cross-department battle against cybercrime.

“So what do we do about this, how can we stop it, what kind of recovery plans do we need to have in place?” said Pace University President Stephen Friedman during a speech at the symposium, citing recent news of cybercrime and Chinese hackers targeting U.S. critical infrastructure.

“I believe that answering those questions requires the kinds of cooperation and partnership that we see here today,” Friedman said.

The city is getting help from the Secret Service, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), local businesses, and others. This system of cooperation was actually set up in 2001 when President George W. Bush signed the USA PATRIOT Act (H.R. 3162) into law. The act established the Electronic Crime Task Forces (ECTFs) under the Secret Service.

According to the Secret Service website, “The concept of the ECTF network is to bring together not only federal, state and local law enforcement, but also prosecutors, private industry and academia.”

CybercrimeEvent Standing 350x234 Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

The panel of speakers at the Feb. 28, 2013, “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ symposium stand for a photo. (L-R) Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office Paul Mahon, Deloitte & Touche LLP Principal Kelly Bissell, Association of Chartered Certified Accountants CEO Helen Brand, Pace University Computer Information Systems Program Chair Dr. Darren Hayes, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Officer Joe Leonard, Co-founder of the Verizon Business Investigative Response Unit Christopher Novak, and Executive District Attorney and Chief of the Manhattan DA Investigation Division David Szuchman. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)

The basic purpose of the ECTF, it states, “is the prevention, detection, mitigation and aggressive investigation of attacks on the nation’s financial and critical infrastructures.”

Paul Mahon, assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office, who moderated the Pace event, said that his office is available to help local businesses with cybersecurity.

“For private industries, the Secret Service—through DHS and through the PATRIOT Act—has been mandated to reach out to you and help in any way that we can,” Mahon said. “There’s no cost associated with it.”

“If a small company does want to talk about their security system, we can give them free advice on how to best protect [their networks],” he added.

Digital Evidence

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office also received $4.2 million last year to build a cybercrime lab. It works as the city’s crime scene investigation lab for computers, where investigators can sift through data for evidence and search hacked hard drives for digital fingerprints.

Working with digital evidence is not easy, however. Computer forensics can be even more difficult to work with than physical evidence.

“You have to prove to the court that the data hasn’t been altered, that it does stand, and the accused was the one who should be standing trial,” Mahon said. “It’s a tumultuous process.”

At the end of the day, however, cybercrime is a new field for both criminals and law enforcement. Vance said that while more crime in New York is moving to the wires, through the cooperation between businesses, academia, and local and federal law enforcement, “we are in Manhattan having a lot of success.”

He said that when most of us think of “crime scenes,” television shows like “Law and Order” may come to mind—with yellow tape and the flashing lights of police cars. “But I think we all know today, the crime scene we think of is a different type of crime scene,” he said. “And now when I look back to the 1980s, when I was an assistant DA, we could not have had a more different picture of criminal trends in Manhattan than we do today,” Vance said. “Today, it’s identity theft and cybercrime. That’s what’s happening in every neighborhood around Manhattan, and I think, around the country.”

Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA | New York City | United States | Epoch Times.

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The Rush To Fix Britain’s Cyber Police

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When I ask Charlie McMurdie, head of the Met’s Police Central e-Crime Unit (PCeU), if she’s worried about the formation of the National Cyber Crime Unit, her hands cover her eyes in despair, half-mocking, half-genuine.

She knows that in the next nine months, she will be tasked with completing the merger of the PCeU with the cyber arm of the Serious Organised Crime Agency(SOCA), to form Britain’s lead cyber police squad, the NCCU. McMurdie knows this is going to take a monumental effort, one that will see the end of the PCeU, which she helped set up in 2008. She’s fretting over the fact that the NCCU doesn’t even have a proper home yet, nor a boss to lead British cyber policing into a new era. And she doesn’t even know if she’ll still be policing cyber crime at the end of it all.

British cyber police

Britain United Kingdom Keyboard Shutterstock ronfromyork The Rush To Fix Britains Cyber PoliceBut the effort may well be worth it, for Britain’s public and businesses alike. That’s because British policing of e-crime, on a national basis, is lacking in a number of crucial areas.

Freedom of Information (FOI) requests sent out byTechWeekEurope to every police force in the UK have revealed stark differences in records of cyber crime across the UK.

The Metropolitan Police, unsurprisingly, has seen the most action. It saw a rise in Computer Misuse Act offences from 11,181 in 2010 to 12,817 in 2012 (up to November). Yet 997 individuals were charged, less than in either 2010, when 1291 were charged, or 2011, when the number was 1262. Why the drop in charges when the number of offences has risen by over 1,000 in the London area alone? Have the police failed to improve their handling of cyber cases over the last three years? The data may indicate so.

Elsewhere, the police are seeing little cyber-related action, in comparison to other common crimes such as burglary, or vandalism. Indeed, it appears to be declining in many areas, whilst just a handful of individuals have been charged in the last three years.

In Leicestershire, Internet-based fraud offences went down from 298 in 2010 to 167 in 2011 and 143 in 2012, up to November. In Hertfordshire there were just 189 cyber-related offences and 21 charged from 1 Jan 2010 to 1 November 2012. Lancashire recorded 19 Internet-based offences over the same time frame, six under the Computer Misuse Act. Just one was charged – they received a prison sentence, but it involved other connected offences.

Strathclyde reported 466 cyber crimes in 2010, 543 in 2011 but then only 143 between January and October in 2012. Surrey has seen a decline in Computer Misuse Act offences, from 45 in 2010 to 17 in 2012, and it’s only charged one person.

In all FOI responses, there was either a decline or very modest growth in records of cyber crime. That’s despite indications from many sources showing Internet crime is on the rise. Recent figures from the British Retail Consortium showed the overall cost of retail crime in the UK jumped 15.6 percent in a year. E-crime rose to become the most costly of all retail crimes, accounting for 37 percent of the total £1.6 billion lost in one year.

In some cases, police defer recording of cyber crime to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB), but that doesn’t account for the lack of any notable rises in e-crime records across UK forces.

Patchy policing

But what do all these figures tell us? They indicate a national patchiness in cyber policing, where forces outside of the Met just don’t have enough capability or willingness to up their efforts, security experts believe. The map below highlights this patchiness, showing differences in the levels of cyber crime and in the quality of records within police forces (those forces not on the map were unable to provide data):

View TechWeekEurope‘s  Cyber Crime Map of Britain in a full screen map

“Nationally it is very, very patchy,” says Ross Anderson, professor of security engineering at the University of Cambridge, a man who’s been watching the cyber crime space for over quarter of a century and continues to be an expert witness during court cases.

“I see some very large differences in capability between different forces… but even in the Metropolitan Police I’ve got one or two shocking cases on my desk at the moment for expert witness work, with completely clueless detective constables in outlying police stations.

“Even within the Met it’s a curate’s egg… there are some detective constables who, quite frankly, should be sent back to school.”

Anderson believes a major problem stems from advice handed out by the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) in 2005. The body said victims of cyber fraud should go to their banks when something was amiss, not the police. Police simply don’t have to deal with a lot of cyber crime, because the banks are supposed to be dealing with it, Anderson tells TechWeekEurope.

This has spawned two negative consequences, he says. First, the banks don’t effectively deal with the problem, consumed as they are with other issues, and customers have a torrid time trying to recover their funds and seek justice. Second, the police don’t invest in their digital divisions, and so aren’t effective when they are tasked with investigating a hacking offence.

“If you’re the victim of a scam you can’t even find someone to talk to, let alone get your money back,” he adds. “And the police are unsympathetic.”

Big Data = Big Problems

Big Data, it seems, is also presenting a challenge to police. Amassing information in major criminal cases, where sleuths have to trawl through terabytes on terabytes of information, and then present it effectively as evidence, is something many forces have not gotten to grips with. Indeed, lack of digital forensics capability is perhaps the most concerning gap in cyber policing today. As Anderson puts it, “they’re not wading, they’re drowning” in data.

Peter Sommer (pictured), a digital forensics specialist and another expert witness often called upon in criminal cases, including those on terrorism and hacking, believes all detectives should have at least a basic grasp of handling digital evidence.

Peter Sommer The Rush To Fix Britains Cyber Police

“The front-line detective needs to be able to interact and work with forensic technicians. Because of the ever-changing nature of computer hardware and software, and the rapid development of new criminal methods, basic training for all detectives cannot be a one-off exercise but requires relatively frequent refreshment,” Sommer told the Home Affairs Committee carrying out an inquiry into e-crime in December.

“Because of the quantities of digital material available – numbers of computers, mobile phones, tablets etc, plus the ever-increasing storage capacity each holds – selections have to be made. Police refer to this process as triage but insufficient thought has been given to how it is executed – and by whom.”

Sommer believes police need more regional hubs of digital forensic expertise who can assist local forces as and when they’re needed, as part of a tiered approach. And forces should be wary of outsourcing to private groups – if an officer doesn’t quite know what he wants from digital evidence, the tender will be flawed, and the whole process broken from the start, he says.

There’s also a major issue in defining cyber crime and recording it within police forces. The FOI results above, perhaps obviously, don’t cover every kind of cyber crime, as many forces could not supply any data outside of Computer Misuse Offences.

In many cases, crimes that could be deemed as cyber offences are counted as Fraud Act breaches. But many forces don’t have a system where they can log a cyber element, meaning the digital side drops out of the statistics.

McMurdie (pictured below) admits forces are still incompetent at this. “I’ve been banging on about this for the last three or four years – we don’t actually record particularly well within law enforcement, the cyber aspect of our investigations or bespoke cyber attacks,” she tells TechWeek.

This is why, in many of the FOI responses, police forces said they couldn’t trawl through all cases to find crimes with a cyber element. Those who responded with full figures including non-CMA offences, like the Met, clearly had proper recording in place.

But why does recording even matter? As anyone who’s been watching the Big Data boom in the private sector will know, pulling valuable information out of piles of data can provide significant benefits. With a well organised data warehouse – or enough muscle to search unorganised data -  organisations can mine information to see where their strengths and weaknesses lie. Keeping proper records, Sommer argues, can help police see what resources are available and in turn improve the effectiveness of cyber investigations.

The NFIB, which gets its data from Action Fraud, a “one-stop national reporting centre” for fraud which works with various organisations as well as the police, should help with the fraud recording. But elsewhere forces have much to improve on when it comes to taking advantage of the reams of data they have access to.

Losing the war

Even police chiefs admit they are losing the fight on cyber crime. At that same inquiry where Sommer raised his qualms, Commissioner Adrian Leppard, of the City of London Police, which is home to the  NFIB, admitted the tug of war was being won by the crooks.

“We are not winning. I do not think we are winning globally, and I think this nature of crime is rising exponentially, which is clearly why you are here and asking these questions today,”  Commissioner Leppard said. “As a country, we are as far advanced as any other European country, and indeed anywhere else in the world, but we are new in our development.”

Another sign the police are losing the war on cyber crooks came from the NFIB. It recorded 47,543 cyber related crimes in 2012, according to another FOI response. The NFIB found the largest sum reported lost was £600,000 of which just £7,000 was recovered. Crooks are making off with a lot of money and it’s to the detriment of the British economy.

McMurdie is far from naive on the nature of the battle with crooks in the online realm. “You only have to speak to industry to see how much they’re suffering and losing to cyber crime attacks. We haven’t got the capability to respond to all that,” she says.

McMurdie The Rush To Fix Britains Cyber Police

“I think criminals are moving online – it is far easier for them to move online faster, share knowledge, share how to conduct criminal attacks, or exploit the uses of technology. They don’t have the same barriers and hurdles as us.

“We have done a great job of integrating capabilities, bringing in partners to work with us … but we need to pick up the pace even more so now.”

And that’s why the government is attempting to fix the problem with one body that will deal with high-level cyber crime posing a threat to Britain. It’s also why various hubs are being set up across the UK to work with the National Cyber Crime Unit, hopefully making cyber policing at a local level more effective.

But it is going to be a chaotic next nine months, pregnant with worry about whether SOCA and PCeU forces will combine effectively. SOCA has been charged with tackling the intelligence capabilities for major cyber investigations, PCeU will be on the operational side, taking on investigations and assisting other police forces across the UK.

Anderson worries the high-quality PCeU capability is going to be kiboshed when it is merged with SOCA. “It’ll become useless… this could have dire effects,” he claims.

In McMurdie’s office, she isn’t so downbeat, but there’s a nervousness in the air. “There are loads of issues to consider and manage to make sure that transition is successful and is delivered smoothly without losing our operational capability.”

On 1 October, the NCA and the NCCU will be formally launched. Over the next two to three months, a “shadow capability” will be up and running, showing what the new force will look like. A handful of employees have made the move over to the as-yet non-existent NCCU, but others may decide they’re happier in the Met, which needs to retain cyber skills.

Thankfully, there shouldn’t be any job cuts. The plan is to retain the number of staff at both the PCeU and SOCA, whilst adding another 70 workers. What about McMurdie herself? “Maybe I shouldn’t go into that… there will be a new head appointed for the NCCU, they are doing interviews.”

Attitude problems

The logistics of the grand merger will provide significant new challenges. But old ones remain, ones that need eradicating before British police can become truly modern.

One of the biggest is attitude. Cyber operations just do not inspire the same respect as “mainstream” crimes, like burglary or murder. That’s something John Austen experienced in the early 1990s, as a pioneer of cyber policing.

Austen made the first ever arrest for illegal access to a computer system, when he apprehended Robert Schifreen (now a well-regarded author and consultant) on a cold night in 1985, for gaining the login details to Prince Phillip’s BT Prestel Mailbox.

Along with his co-defendent Steve Gold, Schifreen took on the courts for two years, before eventually being acquitted. At the time, there was no law covering computer hacking, so the pair were initially charged and found guilty of forgery. On appeal they proved that hacking was not forgery and were acquitted.

The lack of a legal framework drove governmental and police forces to draw up the Computer Misuse Act – a process in which Austen was a driving force. If the CMA had existed in the 1980s, Schifreen would most likely now have a criminal record.

Austen worked as chair of the Interpol Computer Crime Committee from 1991 to 1996 while, in Britain, he set up the Computer Crime Unit at New Scotland Yard in 1994,and ran it until September 1996.

In the early days of the CMA, judges hadn’t quite grasped what this law was all about. “We had very funny cases at the start – the judges didn’t follow what the legislation was about,” Austen tells TechWeekEurope. “We ended up explaining this new law to them.

“We actually didn’t lose many cases at the start, but we did lose a few where the evidence wasn’t that strong.”

Twenty years on, McMurdie admits that her her team still suffers similar struggles surrounding perception today. “I think it is a lack of understanding… the cyber component isn’t the visible sort of crime that a mugging is.

“It’s why we need this tiered approach. We need mainstream knowledge, understanding, capability, then we need that higher-level regional capability to take on the complex investigations, or those where you need that international aspect. Then you need the National Cyber Crime Unit within that to deal with the sort of cases the PCeU is taking on – high-level stuff.”

cyber spend image The Rush To Fix Britains Cyber Police

Funding is another persistent problem, one that Austen described as “huge” in his day. The PCeU is currently drawing up business plans, asking for more money to accelerate the spread of cyber policing across the UK, bidding for additional regional hubs. Of the nine hubs established thus far, just three have full cyber capability, so the PCeU wants to see more of a monetary commitment from those in Whitehall.

And PCeU has earned it. In 2011, the Coalition asked the division to save the country £504 million over four years by either preventing cyber crimes or recovering funds. To do that, PCeU was given just £30 million. At the start of 2013, the PCeU has achieved well over £800 million in savings.

It’s clear the government is, to some extent, taking the threat seriously. It has invested £650 million of additional funds, although the police get comparatively little of this (see chart for a breakdown of where money has gone thus far), attempting infrastructural reform and talking openly about the problem, as well as joining pan-European and global initiatives to take on cyber crooks. But it’s also clear much, much more can be done.

The formation of the NCCU cyber squad over the next nine months, which hopefully won’t be as rushed as has been indicated, will be crucial to the government’s plans to take on cyber crooks. Yet until greater respect for Internet-based investigations is inculcated across UK police forces, and across Whitehall, this country will continue to be on the losing side of the war on cyber crime.

The Rush To Fix Britain’s Cyber Police.

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UK Needs More Skilled Cybercrime Fighters

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uk 4 UK Needs More Skilled Cybercrime FightersA lack of skilled workers is hampering the UK‘s fight against cybercrime, the National Audit Office (NAO) has warned.

The spending watchdog had heard from experts who believe it could take “up to 20 years to address the skills gap”, it said in a report. But progress has been made in tackling cyber fraud, with more police resources and prosecutions aimed at catching cyber criminals, the NAO added.

The government said it was “investing heavily” in research and education. The number of IT and cyber security professionals in the UK has not increased in line with the growth of the internet, the watchdog said.

Labour said the report highlighted the lack of support for “the next generation of British cybersecurity experts.”

UK Needs More Skilled Cybercrime Fighters | DFI News.

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