“The Metropolitan Police assessment is that specialist e-crime units can no longer cope with all cyber crime,” detective inspector Charlie McMurdie said in the report.
“It is widely recognised that e-crime is the most rapidly expanding form of criminality, encompassing both new criminal offences in relation to computers and old crimes, committed using digital or computer technology.”
The report went on to say: “Prosecutions of virus writers and hackers in the UK have been infrequent up to now. However, the motivation of such offenders has now migrated from the curious adolescent to the profile of the financially motivated professional, often with organised crime links.”
Chief constables from across the UK are lobbying the Home Office for funding to set up a national e-crime force to help combat the growing number of offences.