http://www.soca.gov.uk/assessPublications/downloads/SOCAAnnualRep2006_7.pdf
That's their annual report for 2006-2007. I refer you to pay 33 of the PDF.
In 2005, the then Home Secretary described a range of ways in which SOCA’s progress towards the longer
term aim of harm reduction would be assessed. Of these, the two that should appear first as SOCA
develops are:
• growth in SOCA’s own capacity to make a difference, with particular focus on the quality of
understanding of organised crime; and
• performance in asset recovery work.
I am assessing them by the exact same standards they set themselves, and they fail, and not just a little.
We can also look at conviction numbers...
Figures show that the Serious Organised Crime Agency achieved 243 convictions in 2007-08 for drug trafficking, a 27 per cent fall compared to the 309 convictions under its predecessor the National Crime Squad in 2005/06.
The disappointing performance comes despite the body boasting a budget of £452million and 4,000 staff and spending more than half of its time trying to tackle class A drugs crimes.
There was also a similar poor showing last year in 2006/07 when SOCA - described as the "British FBI" - only achieved 236 convictions for drug trafficking offences.
Over the same period, recorded drugs offences as logged by the police jumped from 178,000 to 229,000 in England and Wales.
The Tories said that the poor performance was at odds with comments from Home Secretary Jacqui Smith who boasted in Parliament in January "we have seized record amounts of drugs, disrupting and dismantling organised drug trafficking groups".
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/new...king-convictions-fall-under-Britains-FBI.html
We can also look at their 2009 report.
http://www.policeoracle.com/news/SOCA-Annual-Report-2008-09_19181.html
And ask whether the number of convictions and the issues 'solved' in the report mean that we are getting value for money from them.
So I'll ask again, what value for money benefit are they providing?