Appealing to EU leaders for greater powers to fight tech-savvy
criminals, Catherine De Bolle said its member states do not yet
have the domestic regulations or technology to fill the policing
gap that will open up when 4G networks become obsolete.
"It is one of the most important investigative tools that police
officers and services have, so we need this in the future," she
said in an interview, giving the example of locating a child who
has been kidnapped.
European police authorities are now able to listen to and track
wanted criminals using mobile communication devices on the 4G
network, but "we cannot use them in the 5G network," De Bolle
said.
She said European law enforcement agencies were brought into
talks on the 5G transition among tech companies and policymakers
too late. That meant that officials were now being forced to
seek ways to limit the damage when police are stripped of
critical surveillance capabilities under 5G.
The comments came as Europol released a report on crime fighting
in the digital era, called "Do Criminals Dream of Electric
Sheep," which described the adoption by criminals of new
encrypted communication tools, 3-D printing technology and
hacking capabilities that target potential victims online.
It highlighted the ability by terrorists to use self-driving
cars or drones as weapons, artificial intelligence that can
spread fake news and high-speed quantum computing that may help
crack encryption codes.
"WEB-BASED CRIMINALITY"
Police agencies "were not vocal enough" when policy makers and
commercial businesses were discussing 5G technology, and De
Bolle is sounding the alarm to avoid a repeat.
"The biggest risk is that we are not enough aware of the
developments on a technological level and we have to be ahead on
this. We have to understand what is going on and we have to try
to provide answers to it," she said.
"So we need to be at the table where they discuss about the
technological development, where they discuss standardization."
Europol opened in 1999 as Europe's collective policing agency
and combats cross-border organized crime, terrorism and
cybercrime in the bloc. It has 900 staff based in The Hague.
The agency is in discussions in Brussels to double its budget
from this year's 138 million euros ($155 million) by 2027,
largely to revamp its cybercrime capabilities, De Bolle said,
detailing the new report.
"The area we are working in and the technological evolution we
are dealing with - the innovation used by criminals, the
web-based criminality - it is huge," said De Bolle, who joined
Europol in May 2018 from the Belgian police force.
She made the case for Europol to become a platform for
modernizing EU police forces by developing digital tools and
technology.
To do that, Europol would need greater political and financial
support from European institutions. In the next seven-year EU
budget period from 2021 to 2027 "we need a doubling of the money
we have today," she said.
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch, Editing by William Maclean)
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