Britain's answer to the FBI, the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca), has been branded a disaster by the law enforcement chief whose proposals in 2003 led to its creation. Terry Byrne, former director-general for law enforcement at Customs & Excise, said the agency was failing and its performance was "dismal".
He added: "The agency is claiming to have seized 84 tons of cocaine across the world, yet the availability of cocaine in the UK is at an all-time high and street prices at an all-time low. This is not the agency I envisaged and I would not have proposed the transfer of Customs drugs responsibilities and resources to such an organisation if I had known how it was going to be so ill-directed." Launched in April 2006, Soca took over responsibilities from the National Crime Squad, Customs, MI5 and the National Criminal Intelligence Service. Its director-general, Bill Hughes, has dismissed criticism of its lack of high-profile success, saying it was in "a marathon, not a sprint". For the first two years Soca's prime focus was on a list of 130 "Mr Bigs" of UK crime. Mr Byrne asked: "How professional was Soca intelligence if it took nearly two years to identify that some were dead, incarcerated or low-level criminals doing little damage?"
Paul Lashmar is a journalist and university lecturer who has covered many of the major stories of the last 30 years. He is also an author and TV Producer. Paul is on staff at Brunel University as a lecturer in journalism.
Specialist areas include: * Terrorism * Intelligence * Spying * Organised crime * Business fraud * The Cold War
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Henry Stewart Talks' has just released its online series of audiovisual seminars on Journalism. The series of 11 talks given by international journalists and academics is edited by Paul Lashmar.
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Paul is giving a paper on trust between the media and intelligence services at Global Media and the ‘War on Terror’: An International Conference to be held Monday 13 - Tuesday 14 September 2010 at the University of Westminster, UK.
Paul Recommends:
I’ve just read David Harvey’s ‘Enigma of Capital'. Harvey ia CUNY professor and his thorough analysis of the power of ‘The Party of Wall St’ is devastating. Especially given that the Party seems has survived the post crisis fall out and it is getting back to business as usual. Interestingly Harvey is one of those who is rehabilitating Marx. His 'What is to be done?' chapter is thought provoking. (Profile Books, 2010, £14.99)