NCA Arrests 57 Suspects In Cybercrime Clampdown

National Crime Agency arrests dozens in cybercrime clampdown on suspected hackers and other online criminals

British police have arrested dozens of suspect hackers as part of a “strike week” against cybercrime.

According to the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA), it has this week arrested 57 people in 25 separate operations.

Suspect Arrests

According the suspects have been arrest because they thought to be involved in different types of cybercrime, including network intrusion and data theft from multinational companies and government agencies; Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks; cyber-enabled fraud; and malicious software and virus development.

The arrests took place across England, Scotland and Wales and involved officers from the NCA’s National Cyber Crime Unit (NCCU), Metropolitan Police and Regional Organised Crime Unit’s (ROCUs).

Young man in handcuffs - copyright FotoliaThe arrested suspects tend to be mostly in their twenties, but the youngest arrested is a 16-year-old male from the Pudsey area of Leeds. He was arrested by the Metropolitan Police for suspected Computer Misuse Act offences concerning the use of DDoS attacks believed to target approximately 350 websites. He is reportedly connected to the Lizard Squad group.

The NCA also worked with the American FBI and issued a production order on a hosting company in the East Midlands whose servers are suspected of being used to house suspected criminal infrastructure. A number of cease and desist orders have also been issued.

“These arrests around the country this week are a result of the essential partnership activity with law enforcement, industry and government that is at the heart of fighting cybercrime,” said Andy Archibald, Deputy Director of the NCA’s National Cyber Crime Unit.

“Criminals need to realise that committing crime online will not make them anonymous to law enforcement,” Archibald added. “We are continuously working to track down and apprehend those seeking to utilise computers for criminal ends, and to disrupt the technical networks and infrastructures supporting international cyber crime.”

“It’s imperative that we continue to work with partners to pursue and disrupt the major crime groups targeting the UK, but also, crucially, work to make sure that people have the knowledge and resources to make the UK as inhospitable as possible for cyber criminals in the first place,” he said.

Law Enforcement

The cybercrime threat is widely recognised now in certain sectors such as the banking and finance market, but the NCA warned last August that two in five British Internet users are putting themselves at risk by not protecting all of their devices with security software.

The National Cyber Crime Unit (NCCU) was officially launched as part of the National Crime Agency back in October 2013 to target cybercriminals.

It comes after a report last year from Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC), which said that the majority of police forces across the UK do not have a digital crimes unit capable of dealing with online events.

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