The Government is making a step-change in its response to the
threat. A broad and deep public-private partnership is at the
heart of this new approach. The Minister of State for Security
will become the Minister of State for Security and Economic
Crime. Further, the Government will:
- Establish a new Ministerial Economic Crime Strategic Board
chaired by the Home Secretary, to agree strategic priorities
across Government; ensure resources are allocated to deliver
those priorities; and scrutinise performance and impact against
the economic crime threat.
- Create a new multi-agency National Economic Crime Centre
(NECC) hosted in the National Crime Agency to task and
coordinate the law enforcement response, working in the closest
possible partnership with the private sector.
- Create a dedicated team to use the power in the Criminal
Finances Act 2017 to forfeit criminal money held in suspended
bank accounts.
- Legislate to give the National Crime Agency powers to
directly task the Serious Fraud Office, who will continue to
operate as an independent organisation.
- Publish draft legislation on the creation of a register of
the beneficial ownership of overseas companies and other
entities that own property in the UK or participate in
Government contracts.
- Reform of the Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) regime, in
partnership with the private sector, law enforcement and
regulators, to reduce tick-box compliance, direct the regime to
focus on the highest threats, help firms better protect
themselves and improve law enforcement outcomes.
- Review disclosure procedures to explore how to make
prosecutorial processes more effective and efficient. The
Attorney-General will lead this work.
- Support a Law Commission review of the Proceeds of Crime
Act 2002 to identify improvements to our powers to confiscate
proceeds of crime.
In addition, the Government is today publishing the UK’s first
cross-government Anti-Corruption Strategy, and the Prime
Minister has appointed MP as her Anti-Corruption
Champion. A copy will be available from Gov.UK and placed in
the House Library.
The Strategy provides a framework to guide UK government
efforts against corruption both domestically and
internationally for the period up to 2022. It sets six
priorities to:
- reduce the insider threat in high risk domestic sectors
(ports and borders, prisons, policing, defence);
- strengthen the integrity of the UK as a centre of global
finance;
- promote integrity across the public and private sectors;
- reduce corruption in public procurement and grants;
- improve the business environment globally; and
- work with other countries to combat corruption.
There will be ministerial oversight of implementation and my
department will provide an annual written update to parliament
on progress.
To support the delivery of these commitments, responsibility
for the Joint Anti-Corruption Unit will transfer from the
Cabinet Office to the Home Office. This change will be
effective immediately.