HEAD OF NTAC ANNOUNCED
Sun, May 20, 2001
Source:
HEAD OF NATIONAL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE CENTRE (NTAC) ANNOUNCED
Assistant Chief Constable Ian Humphreys will
be the new Head of the National Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC) Home
Secretary Jack Straw has confirmed.
The National Technical Assistance Centre will help the
Government respond to criminals, such as pornographers and paedophiles, who use
encryption to conceal the contents of their computer files.
NTAC will give law enforcement
agencies the ability to fight crime in the information age and provide a
facility for the processing of lawfully intercepted communications and lawfully
seized protected electronic data, which can then be used to bring serious
criminals to justice.
NTAC will remain under the
day-to-day control of the Home Office, and the new Head Ian Humphreys, who is on
secondment to the Home Office from Kent County Constabulary, will be accountable
to the Home Secretary.
Home Secretary Jack Straw
said:
"The Government is committed to action
against hi-tech crime in line with our objective of making the UK the best and
safest place in the world to conduct and engage in
e-commerce.
"The National Technical Assistance Centre
will give law enforcement the capability to derive intelligence and evidence
from new information and communication technologies.
"It will provide techniques for lawful
interception of modern multimedia communications and improve facilities for
deriving evidence from lawfully seized computer data.
"NTAC will make the difference between
serious crimes such as paedophilia, extortion and fraud being prevented or
punished and criminals going unpunished and free to continue their
activities."
Head of the National Technical
Assistance Centre Ian Humphreys said:
"NTAC represents a major new initiative in
the fight against criminals engaged in serious and organised crime, such as
paedophiles, drug traffickers and fraudsters. We will provide specialist
technical support to the law enforcement effort to counter the evil intent of
those determined to exploit technology to the detriment of decent members of
society."
NTAC will be a twenty-four hour
centre operated on behalf of all the law enforcement, security and intelligence
agencies, to provide a central facility for the complex processing of encrypted
material derived from lawfully intercepted computer
communications.
It will make technically possible
the provisions included in Part III of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers
Act 2000 requiring the disclosure of keys to lawfully obtained protected
electronic data. These powers are expected to come in to force in late
2001.
The Chancellor announced in the
budget in April last year that £25 million of capital modernisation funding had
been made available to the Home Office over two years for the capital costs of
developing a National Technical Assistance Centre.
This followed the Cabinet Office Performance
Innovation Unit's report "Encryption and Law Enforcement", published in May
1999, which recommended the establishment of a Technical Assistance Centre to
assist law enforcement agencies to gain access to communications protected by
encryption.
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