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Crime report reveals Scotland ‘terror attack’ plan – BBC News

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Crime report reveals Scotland ‘terror attack’ plan – BBC News

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, Counter terrorism investigation Operation Ferulic was led by Police Scotland

  • Author, David Cowan
  • Role, Home Affairs Correspondent, BBC Scotland

A multi-agency police inquiry has investigated what appeared to be preparations for a terrorist attack in Scotland.

Brief details of the case have been revealed in a report from the National Crime Agency (NCA).

The NCA said a counter terrorism investigation titled Operation Ferulic was led by Police Scotland and centred on “the apparent preparation for a firearms attack in the Edinburgh area.”

Several specialists from the NCA’s Major Crime Investigative Support unit were drafted in to assist the inquiry.

Forensic clinical psychologists, behavioural investigative advisors and interview advisors were involved in assessing and managing risk and interview preparation.

The report does not reveal the outcome of the investigation or whether anyone was arrested or charged.

Organised crime increase

The NCA is the UK’s lead agency against organised crime including human, weapon and drug trafficking, and cybercrime and economic crime.

Its involvement in Operation Ferulic is mentioned in a report to the board of the Scottish Police Authority, the organisation which oversees policing in Scotland.

The document details the NCA’s activities in Scotland between October 2023 and March 2024.

It says it was involved in 276 investigations in 2023/24 which disrupted serious and organised crime in Scotland, a 10% increase on the previous year.

In the last six months, 15 investigations are said to have had a major impact on criminal activity including drugs, firearms and child sexual abuse.

The report says over 100 officers from the NCA, Police Scotland and a regional organised crime unit from the south-west of England executed 12 search warrants against organised crime group members based across Greater Glasgow.

This was part of a national investigation into large scale fraud targeting elderly and vulnerable victims, with seven people arrested for money laundering and fraud offences.

In December, the NCA supported a Police Scotland operation against modern slavery and human trafficking.

The inquiry targeted an Eastern European organised crime group operating north of the border and focussed on the laundering of £500,000.

The report says the group is believed to bring vulnerable Romanian women as young as 18 into the UK and force them to work in brothels under its control.

Another investigation targeted a fraudulent courier scheme involving 15 victims who had lost £1.8m. Four suspects were arrested.

The Child Sexual Abuse Referrals Bureau at the NCA sent Police Scotland 707 pieces of information related to online child sexual abuse.

Police Scotland were said to have made 42 arrests and safeguarded 69 children. An additional 80 victims were identified from indecent images of children.

Hackers stole three terabytes of data from the board’s IT system and later published it on the dark web, part of the internet which can only be accessed with specialist software.

The NCA said the attack was at an advanced stage when its cyber crime unit “disseminated real time intelligence” to the board and Police Scotland.

Police Scotland has been approached for comment.

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