Transnational organized crime (TOC) involves criminal groups that coordinate illegal activities across national borders. TOC groups use violence and corruption to traffic drugs, arms, people, toxic waste, and other illicit goods. Several international law enforcement agencies work to combat TOC, including Interpol, Europol, and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. However, TOC remains a significant threat due to the challenges of international cooperation and the economic benefits some states and groups receive from criminal enterprises.
2. Introduction
• Transnational organized crime (TOC) is organized
crime coordinated across national borders,
involving groups or markets of individuals
working in more than one country to plan and
execute illegal business ventures.
• In order to achieve their goals, these criminal
groups use systematic violence and corruption.
• Common transnational organized crimes include
conveying drugs, conveying arms, trafficking for
sex, toxic waste disposal, materials theft and
poaching
3. History
• Prior to World War I, several organizations were created to formalize international police
cooperation, but most quickly failed, primarily because public police institutions were not
sufficiently detached from the political centers of their respective states to function
autonomously as expert bureaucracies. In 1914, the First International Criminal Police
Congress was held in Monaco, which saw police officers, lawyers and magistrates from 24
countries meeting to discuss arrest procedures, identification techniques, centralized
international criminal records and extradition proceedings. This organization appeared poised
to avoid the political forces that ended earlier organizations, but the outbreak of World War I
disorganized the Congress.
• In 1923, a second International Criminal Police Congress was held in Vienna, on the initiative
of Mr. Hans Schober, President of the Austrian police. Schober, eager to avoid the politics that
doomed previous international police efforts, noted that "ours is not a political but a cultural
goal. It only concerns the fight against the common enemy of humankind: the ordinary
criminal." This second Congress created the International Criminal Police Commission
(ICPC), which served as the direct forerunner of Interpol. Founding members included police
officials from Russia, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Poland, China, Egypt, France, Greece,
Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland and Yugoslavia. In 1926, the
ICPC's General Assembly, held in Berlin, proposed that each country establish a central point
of contact within its police structure: the forerunner of the National Central Bureau (NCB). In
1938, the Nazis assumed control of the ICPC and most countries stop participating,
effectively causing the ICPC to cease to exist as an international organization.
4. • After World War II, Belgium led the rebuilding of the organization, with a new
headquarters in Paris and a new name - Interpol. The United Nations did not
recognize Interpol as an intergovernmental organization until 1971. On June 17,
1971, President Nixon declared "America's public enemy number one in the United
States is drug abuse. In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage
a new, all-out offensive." With this declaration, the United States began the War on
Drugs. At the time, the flow of illicit narcotics into its borders was deemed a major
risk to the health and safety of Americans, and as a result, enormous resources were
spent in the effort to curtail both the supply of and demand for illegal drugs. In the
three decades that followed President Nixon's declaration, drug trafficking served as
the dominant form of what the United States and many of its allies viewed as
transnational organized crime.
• In recent years, that viewpoint has changed. The character of transnational
organized crime has changed in three major ways since the war on drugs began.
Drug trafficking has become more diversified, criminal networks have harnessed
new methods of conducting business, and the structure of criminal networks has
changed. Organized crime has gone global, giving way to the term transnational
organized crime. Global governance has failed to keep pace with economic
globalization. Antonio Maria Costa, former Executive Director of the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, effectively summarized the change in TOC
over the last quarter century by saying, "as unprecedented openness in trade,
finance, travel and communication has created economic growth and well-being, it
has also given rise to massive opportunities for criminals to make their business
prospe
5. Effects
• TOC is insufficiently understood, according to the Executive Director of the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. In the most recent full-scale United Nations
assessment of TOC, conducted in 2010, the Executive Director states, "there is a
lack of information on transnational criminal markets and trends. The few studies
that exist have looked at sections of the problem, by sector or country, rather than
the big picture. Without a global perspective there cannot be evidence-based
policy."In response to the threat, law enforcement agencies have created a number
of effective approaches for combating this transnational organized crime.
• Louise I. Shelley (Director of the Terrorism, Transnational Crime and Corruption
Center at George Mason University) has said:
• Transnational crime will be a defining issue of the 21st century for policymakers -
as defining as the Cold War was for the 20th century and colonialism was for the
19th. Terrorists and transnational crime groups will proliferate because these crime
groups are major beneficiaries of globalization. They take advantage of increased
travel, trade, rapid money movements, telecommunications and computer links, and
are well positioned for growth.
6. • Most illicit trafficking begins or ends in the world's greatest economic powers, such
as the G8 (forum). In other words, the world's largest trading partners are also the
world's greatest markets for illicit goods and services. Many of these world powers
have recently taken steps to combat TOC in a large, collective, international effort
with partners and allies. Several organizations around the world have initiated
efforts to combat TOC whose success or failure have yet to be determined.
• According to the UN Asia and Far East Institute (UNAFEI), combating
transnational organized crime relies first and foremost on effective investigative
techniques and prosecutorial tools. Three techniques in particular stand out as the
most important in combating transnational organized crime: electronic surveillance,
undercover operations, and the use of confidential informants (CIs), with electronic
surveillance being the single most important and effective law enforcement tool
against TOC. Electronic surveillance provides reliable, often irrefutable evidence of
crimes through a participant's own words or image. This form allows law
enforcement to learn of conspirators' plans before they are carried out and is
particularly helpful in combating TOC because it enables law enforcement in any
country to obtain evidence of co-conspirators in other countries. Obtaining evidence
of conspiratorial planning internationally would otherwise be very difficult.
7. • After electronic surveillance, the second most important tool is
undercover operations, Through undercover operations, law
enforcement agents can infiltrate the highest levels of organized
crime by posing as criminals themselves when real criminals discuss
their plans and seek assistance in committing crimes. Over time,
agents can gain the confidence of criminals and induce them to
reveal information on past or ongoing criminal activities.[citation
needed] followed by CIs refers to individuals who are not willing to
testify but who provide information or assistance to law
enforcement in exchange for money or lenient treatment for their
own crimes and with the promise of confidentiality. In many
cases,[which?] CIs are engaged in criminal activity themselves and
can therefore provide valuable direct evidence regarding the
criminal activities being conducted by their criminal associates.
Such evidence frequently enables law enforcement officers to obtain
warrants authorizing electronic surveillance. In rare cases, the court
may order the disclosure of a CIs identity to a defendant, such as
when the informant can provide evidence that may exculpate the
defendant
8. NEGATIVE EFFECTS
• Transnational organized crime is widely opposed on the
basis of a number of negative effects. It can undermine
democracy, disrupt free markets, drain national assets,
and inhibit the development of stable societies. In
doing so, it has been argued, national and international
criminal groups threaten the security of all nations. The
victims of these transnational crime networks are
governments that are unstable or not powerful enough
to prevent them, with the networks conducting illegal
activities that provide them with profits. Transnational
organized crimes interrupt peace and stability of
nations worldwide, often using bribery, violence, or
terror to meet their needs.
9. International Enforcement Agencies
Interpol
• The idea of the organization known today as Interpol was born at the first International Criminal Police
Congress, held in Monaco in 1914. It was officially created in 1923 with the name, International Criminal
Police Commission, and renamed in 1956 with the name, Interpol. Today, it is the largest international
police organization in the world and is made up of 190 member nations. Each member nation staffs a
national central bureau that communicates and cooperates with other member nations. Its mission is
""Preventing and fighting crime through enhanced cooperation and innovation on police and security
matters".
• Although the organization Interpol exists to coordinate intelligence efforts between national law
enforcement agencies, it is not an international police force, and indeed no such international law
enforcement body with universal jurisdiction exists.
• The agency's number one priority is to maintain a secure global police information system between the
National Central Bureaus of each member nation. In addition to this priority, Interpol provides round-the-
clock support to police and law enforcement agencies of all member nations. It also continuously attempts
to innovate and enhance the tools used to fight crime and it assists in the identification of crimes and
criminals. Finally, it delivers high-level training, certification and accreditation to law enforcement
personnel.
• Like most international CTOC organizations, Interpol suffers from continuously high levels of underfunding.
In 2010, it operated on roughly $75 million budget. Since it holds no authority to conduct independent
investigations or to arrest suspects, it is only as strong as the host country's police force
10. World Bank
• With a membership of 188 nations, the World Bank is nearly the same size as Interpol (190)
and although CTOC is not its primary mission, the World Bank does attempt to combat TOC
by conducting assessments of anti-money laundering provisions and carrying out anti-
corruption efforts. Its efforts are hindered, however, by the lack of concrete mandates and
authorities. In a 2009 World Bank paper entitled, "Slavery and Human Trafficking
International Law and the Role of the World Bank", the author states that "the World Bank’s
mandate appears to permit preventive action", thereby lending doubt whether or not the
World Bank is even permitted by UN mandate to involve itself in the fight against human
trafficking.
• Recognizing the detrimental impact on its mission, the World Bank made a $1.5 billion pledge
in 2011 to help combat TOC in the coming years.
• In another CTOC initiative, the World Bank is partnered with the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime in the Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (StAR). This initiative helps to recover
corruption related proceeds by creating an effective and collaborative environment for global
law enforcement policy development.
International Monetary Fund
• The International Monetary Fund also conducts assessments of anti-money laundering
provisions in countries.
11. Europol
• Europol is the law enforcement agency of the European Union (EU) whose main goal is to help achieve a
safer Europe for the benefit of all EU citizens. The organization does so by assisting the EU Member States
in their fight against serious international crime and terrorism.
• Europol officers hold no authority to conduct arrests but they support EU law enforcement colleagues by
gathering, analyzing and disseminating information and coordinating operations. Europol uses the
information to prevent, detect and investigate offenses, and to track down and prosecute those who
commit them. Europol experts and analysts take part in Joint Investigation Teams which help solve
criminal cases on the spot in EU countries.
Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering
• The Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF), an initiative of the Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD), is an inter-governmental body established in 1989 by the
Ministers of its Member jurisdictions. The objectives of the FATF are to "set standards and promote
effective implementation of legal, regulatory and operational measures for combating money laundering,
terrorist financing and other related threats to the integrity of the international financial system." To this
end, the FATF developed a number of recommendations that have been recognized by law enforcement
agencies around the world as the standard in the combating of TOC; specifically in the fight against money
laundering, terror financing, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
• To help combat CTOC, the FATF maintains a policy that has proven successful thus far, in which it "names
and shames" that jurisdictions that choose to not cooperate with FATF. It also enlists the help of
cooperating countries in the crafting of legislative frameworks used in the effort to combat money
laundering
12. Role of United Nations
• United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime
• On November 15, 2000, the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC) was
adopted by the United Nations General Assembly and is appointed to serve as the most significant mechanism for
fighting TOC internationally. The first of its kind, the convention identified TOC as criminal actions that cannot be
sufficiently combated by pacts tailored to a single commercial enterprise. The Ad Hoc Committee was established
by the United Nations General Assembly to deal with this problem by taking a series of measures against
transnational organized crime. These include the creation of domestic criminal offences to combat the problem,
and the adoption of new, sweeping frameworks for mutual legal assistance, extradition, law-enforcement
cooperation, and technical assistance and training.
• A recent report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime highlighted that Southeast Asia produced an
estimated 48 tons of heroin in 2011. The vast majority of this cultivation – roughly twice that of Afghanistan,
which arguably receives much greater attention – has occurred in the fragile state of Myanmar. The UN report
estimated that the revenue generated from this trade to be worth $16.3 billion during the same period
• The revenues generated from such trafficking often lie at the root of instability and violence in the region.
Additionally, the same routes used to smuggle drugs will likely be used to transport weapons and militants in the
event that the current conflict expands. Reconciling the numerous armed ethnic groups that exist within Myanmar
continues to be a challenge for the nascent government. A strong drug trade will only complicate negotiations
between government officials and these groups.
• Combating TOC internationally proves difficult because so many governments and economies benefit enormously
from TOC. For example, the Russia government benefits from money gained through cybercrime and through ties
between TOC and it energy exporters. China's economy also benefits from cybercrime as well as from
counterfeiting. West African and Latin American politicians are either coerced by or maintain financially beneficial
relationships with drug traffickers.
• UNTOC ability to help combat CTOC is compounded by its inability to directly assist countries that are incapable of
adhering to the convention's guidelines. Most countries agreed for a necessary, innovative, and more strategic
approach at the 2010 conference of parties, yet to date no significant employment of tactics or policy has been
determined. Voluntary contributions account for nearly all of UNODC's funding and the organization suffers from
chronic funding and staffing shortages. This limits UNODC's overall effectiveness.
• The UN General Assembly has also issued many resolutions to combat TOC; however, most have been ineffective
because of their vagueness and irrelevancy