Saturday, 6 October 2018

Sexual offences rise on railways, as more than 2,000 crimes reported to police

Crime reporter(wp/es):
Sexual offences on Britain’s railways are on the rise with more than 2,000 crimes reported last year, official figures show.
The number of sexual offences committed has increased by 16 per cent, jumping to 2,742, although officers believe this may only be a fraction of crimes, as “there are still many more crimes of this type which go unreported.”
60 per cent of these crimes were committed against women, British Transport Police (BTP) said.
Figures of how many offences have been reported to BTP have been published in an annual report. Data reveals some 61,159 crimes were reported by BTP in 2017/18, up from 52,235 during the previous 12 months.
Violent crime accounts for nearly one in five of all cases after rising by 26 per cent to 11,711.
BTP said 63 per cent of these violent crimes were classed as “common assaults”, which involved no injury to the victim.
Offences involving knives or other weapons went up by 46 per cent to 206, while robbery jumped by 53 per cent to 553 recorded crimes.
BTP chief constable Paul Crowther said: "The chances of becoming a victim of crime on the rail network remains low.
"However, after a long period of steady decreases, both crimes per million passenger journeys and notifiable offences have increased."
Nineteen crimes in total were recorded per million passenger journeys.
Forces in England and Wales registered just under 1.4 million offences in the "violence against the person" category in 2017/18 - a rise of nearly a fifth (19 per cent) compared with the previous year.
BTP's figures show a number of other crimes increasing on the rail network, including throwing missiles at trains (up 35 per cent to 316), arson (up 93 per cent to 143), live cable theft (up 86 per cent to 158) and theft from vending machines (up 21 per cent to 240).
The report also addressed terrorism, making reference to the Manchester Arena attack and London attacks.
It read: “The current threat level for international terrorism in the UK is ‘severe’, which means an attack is highly likely.
“However, last year on two occasions the terrorist threat leave was raised to ‘critical’, meaning an attack was expected imminently.
“On both occasions, we mobilised additional officers and worked with our policing partners to increase the number of armed police officers patrolling the rail network to protect the public and rail staff.”
It also tackled the issue of County Lines, adding it has “identified 476 individuals associated with County Lines gangs using trains.”
131 of these individuals were thought to be frequent travellers, it added.
As well as looking at violent and sexual crimes, the annual report also listed incidents such as people trying to harm themselves on the railway and trespassers.
The total number of people known to take their lives on Britain’s railways was 310, compared to 292.
The report read: “We are pleased to report that the number of life-saving interventions increased by 648, with 1,917 people prevented from harming themselves on the railway.”
While more people were helped by life-saving interventions, BTP said the number of trespass incidents has reached its “biggest increase.”
The total number of lost minutes increased by 22 per cent and trespass now accounts for 43 per cent of overall disruption, up from 38 per cent last year.
The force said the increase in the total number of crimes is partly due to improving the way crime is recorded, which has increased accuracy and given victims and witnesses "more confidence to report crime".
Paul Plummer, chief executive of industry body the Rail Delivery Group, said: "The nature of some crimes is changing and as part of our long-term plan to change and improve, we are investing in new technology and innovations to make our railway even safer for our staff and customers."

Machine with power to detect hackers BEFORE they have committed a crime tested by Cambridge scientists

University reporter,Cambridge(wp):
A machine with the power to identify cyber-criminals who may be plotting to commit an offence has been tested successfully by experts. 
Scientists at Cambridge University have tested a system – likened to George Orwell’s "Thought Police" - for scanning the web to identify potential cyber-criminals based on how they were commenting in forums.
But the researchers who piloted the programme denied it would be used by police forces to lock people up before they commit a crime, like in the Tom Cruise movie and dystopian story by Philip K. Dick, “Minority Report”.
Computer scientists used machine learning to crunch swathes of data from 113 known cyber-attackers and built algorithms to compare the data to thousands of underground forum users, scanning comments for the warning signs that they may be planning a cyber-attack.
They whittled the accounts down to 80 individuals who were highly likely to become an "actor" in a cyber-attack, and when the team went back to read the comments first hand, the researchers said it was clear there was certainly cause for suspicion.
The computer "identified variables relating to forum activity that predict the likelihood a user will become an actor of interest to law enforcement,and would therefore benefit the most from intervention," said the published paper.
"This work provides the first step towards identifying ways to deter the involvement of young people away from a career in cybercrime," the paper said.
Dr Alice Hutchings worked alongside the Cambridge Cybercrime Centre at the university’s Department of Computer Science and Technology on the research.
She said the team looked at a large pool of a quarter of million users and believe the system could be used up by cyber-crime police as a way of detecting “risky” individuals.
The technique worked by processing some 30 million posts from the Hackforums website, looking for key words and references to criminal activity, such as “DDoS” referring to a Denial of Service attack, or people who discussed distributing malware and “account cracking”.
"The National Crime Agency does have a preventative strategy within their cyber-crime unit," she added. "They've said they want to be able to divert people away from serious activity."
But she dreads the idea that it could be used by so-called “Thought Police” to lock-up potential criminals pre-emptively.
The New Scientist made the comparison between the Cambridge experiment and the authoritarian police in George Orwell’s 1984, in which “Thinkpol” officers seek out “Thoughtcrimes” – punishing people for believing anything that goes against the government.
But it could perhaps play the role of a "Thought Social Worker", using warning signs to intervene before young people turn into criminals, the scientist said.
Dr Hutchings said: "I deplore the idea of thought police arresting people before they commit crimes.
"You shouldn't be held liable for something you've just thought of doing, or spoken about but we need some kind of system to intervene when someone is at risk."
"The aim of doing this is to be able to divert people away from the criminal justice system, by identifying who is most at risk of being prosecuted and putting them in a pro-social pathway. I don't want young people to be arrested, I want to see a successful intervention. 
"Young people are being drawn to this kind of activity, and they are often very talented and intelligent. When they end up in the criminal justice system it is very stigmatising - they end up with fewer prospects, and it can ruin their entire lives."
Cyber crimes have had devastating consequences in the past and can sometimes by driven by tech-minded youngsters.
One young hacker from Hertfordshire created a programme that fuelled more than 1.7 million attacks last year causing millions in damage when he was only 15.
His "TitaniumStresser" code allowed customers (he charged a membership of £250) to disrupt any website they liked, causing immeasurable losses to thousands of individuals, businesses and other organisations.
The need to prevent cyber-attacks is incredibly pressing today.
Government officials this week accused Russia of conducting a Blitzkrieg of attacks, against chemicals weapons watchdogs in the UK, US and Netherlands – allegedly by the Kremlin’s own “Sandworm” hacking unit.
Four Russian men with diplomatic passports were arrested in the Netherlands after an attempted attack on the OPCW laboratories, which are aiding the UK in investigating the nerve agent attack on Sergei Skripal anf his daughter Yulia.
The team were attempting a “brazen” close-range hack into the facility's systems, and it followed a previous attack against Porton Down – one of the UK’s most secretive military research centres.
Despite mounting evidence, the Kremlin continues to deny any involvement, calling the case a widening of the UK governments “propaganda” campaign against Russia.
But it is just the latest in Mr Putin’s online war – Russia has been blamed for playing a role in the distortion of the Brexit referendum and the US election which saw Donald Trump take the presidency.