Fusion Centre collaborates on organised crime

 

Crime fighters work together at new Government hub.

The Government has launched a $14.5 million Criminal Intelligence Fusion Centre, aiming to fight organised crime with an arsenal of analytical and data matching capabilities.

Housed within the Australian Crime Commission (ACC), the Canberra-based centre accommodates up to 33 workstations and is supported by the ACC ICT Branch.

It targets organised criminal activities such as child sex offences, drug and firearm markets, money laundering and complex technology-enabled crime including identity theft.

Investigators and analysts from a range of Government agencies will be co-located at the centre to assist with investigations.

These agencies include the Australian Federal Police, Department of Immigration and Citizenship, the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, the Australian Taxation Office, Centrelink, Customs and Border Protection and State and Territory law enforcement authorities.

"For operational reasons, we cannot provide specific details of the technological capabilities of the centre, but it will have a range of analytical and data matching capabilities," ACC executive director Jane Bailey told iTnews.

While she could not provide details of the volume and nature of data thatis to be shared between agencies, Bailey said the ACC would only share information with certain, pre-approved agencies.

"The ACC only shares information with other agencies where provisions exist under relevant legislation," she explained.

"The ACC operates under a strict privacy controls and legislative and governance framework, which includes oversight by the ACC Board, the Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity [ACLEI] and the Commonwealth Ombudsman."

According to Attorney-General Robert McClelland and Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor, who jointly launched the Fusion Centre, organised crime costs Australia an estimated $15 billion each year.


Fusion Centre collaborates on organised crime
"+1 from me as well. Identity theft in particular needs this sort of attention as well. My only critique would be the relatively small amount of funding.. 14.5 mill ? Lets multiply that by a ..."
By realitybites
 
 
 
Comments: 3
Ezy2Confuze
Jul 15, 2010 10:06 AM
See Conjob, this is what we should be spending the money on, not a filter that just won't work and can be negated too easily.

If you want to get rid of Child Porn - which blind Freddy can tell you, most Servers are private and not advertised on the Internet - then you should be going back to good old fashioned Police work.

Edited by BrettWinterford: 15/7/2010 12:29:03 PM
anonymous
Jul 15, 2010 11:31 AM

@Ezy2Confuze - +1

Exactly as you say, if Conboy agreed to all the money that will be wasted on the filter being given to the police to track down and prosecute child-pornographers, the result would be a much higher success rate.

This is so obvious that we probably have to ask why Conboy refuses to even consider such a common sense action.
realitybites
Jul 15, 2010 12:53 PM
+1 from me as well.
Identity theft in particular needs this sort of attention as well. My only critique would be the relatively small amount of funding.. 14.5 mill ? Lets multiply that by a factor of 10.. When it comes to 'my' tax dollars at work this is the sort of thing that makes me happy.
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