Proceeds of Crime Act 2002: annual report of the appointed person
Written ministerial statement detailing the appointed person’s opinion on the search powers conferred by the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.
This written ministerial statement was laid in the House of Commons by Jeremy Browne and in the House of Lords by Lord Taylor of Holbeach.
The Minister of State for Crime Prevention (Jeremy Browne): My right hon Friend the Home Secretary has today laid before Parliament the 2012-13 annual report of the appointed person under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. The appointed person is an independent person who scrutinises the use of the search power to support the measures in the Act to seize and forfeit criminal cash.
The report gives the appointed person’s opinion as to the circumstances and manner in which the search powers conferred by the Act are being exercised. I am pleased that the appointed person, Douglas Bain, has expressed satisfaction with the operation of the search power and has found that there is nothing to suggest that the procedures are not being followed in accordance with the Act.
From 1 April 2012 to the end of March 2013 over £65 million in cash was seized by law enforcement agencies in England and Wales under powers in the Act. The seizures are subject to further investigation, and the cash is subject to further judicially approved detention, before forfeiture in the magistrates’ court. These powers are a valuable tool in the fight against crime and the report shows that the way they are used has been, and will continue to be, monitored closely.