Crown Prosecution Service Serious and Economic Organised Crime Strategy 2030
- Introduction
- Foreword by Stephen Parkinson, Director of Public Prosecutions
- Foreword by Grace Ononiwu, CBE, Director General for Legal Delivery
- Pillar 1: Enhancing capability and confidence
- Pillar 2: Securing the nation
- Pillar 3: Optimising our use of Tech and AI
- Assurance and Delivery
- Conclusion
Introduction
Serious Economic and Organised Crime (SEOC) is not static. It is dynamic, adaptive, and increasingly complex, shaped by global instability, technological acceleration, and the growing convergence of criminal and state threats. It poses a significant threat to our national security and prosperity and devastates victims’ lives. It is estimated to cost the UK at least £47 Billion annually. This strategy outlines our unwavering commitment to ensuring that assets obtained through criminal activity are recovered in these cases.
In 2024, we published a mission statement setting out our plans to develop a new Serious Economic and Organised Crime Strategy, replacing our previous Economic Crime 2025 Strategy. The previous strategy reflected a more discrete approach to economic offending; however, the evolving nature of crime, with increasing convergence between fraud, organised crime, cyber offending and hostile state activity, means this no longer reflects how offending operates in practice. This strategy therefore adopts a broader SEOC approach, aligning our response to the way these threats operate across the serious economic and organised crime ecosystem.
Over the period covered by the Economic Crime Strategy, April 2021 - December 2024, we prosecuted 25,665 defendants for fraud and forgery offences, resulting in 21,717 convictions. Conviction rates remain consistently high and improving, rising from 83.9% in FY 2022/23 to 85.3% in FY 2023/24, with performance maintained at 85.4% in the first three quarters of FY 2024/25.
Fraudsters and OCGs are increasingly turning to ‘poly-criminality’ in their criminal exploits. Fraud increasingly overlaps with cybercrime and human trafficking, as illustrated by a growing trend of ‘scam centres’ emerging across South-East Asia [UK crackdown on vile scam centres steps up with sanctions on illicit crypto network - GOV.UK]. Those conducting the scams are often trafficked foreign nationals, who have been lured into purpose-built scam compounds under the pretence of legitimate jobs, only to be trapped and forced to carry out online fraud under the threat of torture. They use sophisticated schemes, including scams in which people are lured into fake romantic relationships, to defraud victims on an industrial scale, including in the UK. There is also a strong link between financially motivated sexual extortion, also known as “sextortion”, and organised scam factories, where perpetrators blackmail victims, typically young men and teenagers, with intimate images, which has tragically resulted in multiple suicides in the UK [Sadistic online harm groups putting people at unprecedented risk, warns the NCA - National Crime Agency; More than 110 child sextortion attempts reported each month to UK police forces | Social media | The Guardian].
We need to respond to this changing landscape by looking at increasingly interwoven links between serious economic and organised crime. SEOC 2030 sets out how we will tackle the full spectrum of serious economic and organised crime, including:
- Economic Crime including fraud and forgery, money laundering;
- Cybercrime including cyber-enabled fraud;
- Serious and organised crime including drug and firearm trafficking;
- Modern slavery; criminal exploitation and human trafficking;
- Organised immigration crime; and
- Counter terrorism and hostile state activity which overlaps with serious economic and organised crime.
This strategy is informed by extensive engagement with our frontline colleagues and senior leaders, whose insights have been instrumental in identifying the barriers to effective prosecution and the opportunities for systemic improvement. We focused on understanding the problems we face before moving on to identifying solutions to address them. From the need to modernise our approach to digital evidence and cyber-enabled crime, to the imperative of building stronger partnerships across the economic crime ecosystem, including law enforcement, government, and international partners, their voices have guided every stage of this strategy’s development. It has also been closely aligned with our International 2030 Strategy, reflecting the increasingly international nature of SEOC cases. Both strategies will support the aims of our overarching corporate strategy, CPS 2030.
From hearing the problems our people face in their current work and building our understanding of the evolving threats we will face in the future, including the increasing blur between hostile states and criminal actors, we developed seven outcomes which set the direction for this strategy (figure 1). Our outcomes are underpinned by actions that will strengthen our approach to SEOC cases by 2030. Each year, we will review and update our action plan to enable us to respond to both emerging SEOC threats and to changing structures we expect to see within the criminal justice system as a result of the policing reform plans and the independent review of criminal courts.
Table 1: a table outlining the the problem statement, aims, benefits and outcomes that the SEOC Strategy sets out to achieve
| Problem | Aims | Benefits | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEOC is becoming more complex, connected and technology-enabled, requiring a step change in how the CPS and partners respond. | Enhance capability and confidence | Builds a confident, capable prosecution workforce that can act earlier, think broader and deliver stronger, quality outcomes in the most complex cases |
|
| Securing the Nation | Strengthens the CPS’ role in protecting the public by disrupting serious threats earlier, harder and more effectively across the system. |
| |
| Optimising our use of Tech and AI | Equips the CPS to handle complexity at scale, using technology and AI to improve speed, quality and consistency in decision-making. |
|
Foreword by Stephen Parkinson, Director of Public Prosecutions
Serious Economic and Organised Crime (SEOC) corrodes trust, exploits the vulnerable, and undermines confidence in the rule of law. SEOC is a continually evolving crime area, with organised crime gangs readily able to adapt to and exploit new situations. These crimes are not victimless; SEOC can affect anyone. Criminals are agile, increasingly enabled by technology, with aspects of the offending taking place overseas.
At the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), our aim is to deliver justice through independent, fair and effective public prosecutions. SEOC cases are some of the most difficult and serious that we prosecute. While we have specialist Central Casework Divisions to deal with the most challenging of these cases, the complexity of cases dealt with by CPS Areas is also ever increasing. We know that we need to improve our ability to respond effectively to this evolving threat and improve partnership working with law enforcement across the wider economic crime ecosystem. It is essential that we make sure that the right person is prosecuted for the right offence, and that our charges accurately reflect the entirety of the offending.
SEOC 2030 sets out how we will meet this challenge. Shaped by evidence and informed by frontline experience, it explains how the CPS will strengthen specialist capability and empower prosecutors with the confidence to adopt an inquisitive, proactive approach. We want to add value from the outset of an investigation and drive case quality throughout.
It also highlights that we must prioritise asset recovery from the outset of a case, so that criminality does not pay. SEOC activity is fundamentally profit-driven. Depriving offenders of ill-gotten gains is critical to disrupting criminal capability and reducing repeat offending. Through this strategy, we will renew our emphasis on robust asset recovery, underpinned by closer collaboration with law enforcement, making sure we target the primary incentive for offending and remove the resources that enable further harm.
We will also modernise how we work. That means securely and ethically harnessing technology to deal with the growing volumes and complexity of digital material; using data to spot trends and anticipate emerging harms; and ensuring our people have the tools, training and support to take timely, high‑quality decisions.
At the heart of the strategy is collaboration. SEOC is tackled most effectively when investigators, prosecutors, and international partners act as one system, united by clear outcomes. We will deepen our joint working with policing and specialist agencies, play a greater role in disrupting the threat; and reinforce the principled international cooperation on which so many of these cases depend.
The strategy is designed to be responsive to change. Threats evolve; so will we. We will continuously assess the landscape, adapt, and share learning with our key partners. We will also respond to the changing structures within policing, including the Government’s programme of police reform, ensuring CPS engagement, advice and decision-making, remains aligned to evolving policing models, system leadership arrangements and partnership frameworks, and that our prosecutorial insight helps shape effective joint working across the system.
We enter this next phase with clarity of purpose and a resolute focus on results. Together, we will disrupt and deter serious economic and organised crime, recover criminal assets, and uphold the justice on which a safe and prosperous society depends.
STEPHEN PARKINSON
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Foreword by Grace Ononiwu, CBE, Director General for Legal Delivery
The lines between organised criminality, fraud, money laundering and international crime are becoming increasingly blurred in our digital-first society. In 2022, we recognised these growing links through the establishment of our Serious Economic, Organised Crime and International Directorate (SEOCID).
SEOCID brought together specialists in economic crime, organised crime, proceeds of crime and international law to deliver justice, combat crime across borders and recover money from criminals. SEOCID tackles the most complex serious economic and organised crime and ensures that we have the resilience, expertise and flexibility in our staff and our organisational structure to best respond to its evolution. The Directorate also provides support to all CPS Areas as they deal with increasingly complex cases, which frequently involve cyber and international elements.
The best illustrative example of this dynamic is our work on Operation Venetic; one of the biggest international law enforcement operations in history. Under this operation, EncroChat, an encrypted messaging platform, was infiltrated and incriminating messages from devices linked to organised crime were revealed. Operation Venetic has been highly successful for the CPS, the National Crime Agency (NCA) and Policing. Successful partnership working between the CPS and NCA led to 2,442 convictions between 2021 and 2025 including many high-level members of Organised Crime Groups (OCGs). SEOCID led the national prosecutorial strategy and took on the most complex and serious cases, while CPS Areas delivered the majority of prosecutions, ensuring consistent, high‑quality outcomes across England and Wales. Together, this joint model turned intelligence into sustained operational results at a scale not previously seen.
Operation Venetic demonstrated what is possible when we work at our best and in close partnership. We know, however, that we need to do more to tackle the growing SEOC threat. We need to build on our progress, and through this strategy we will ensure all frontline staff have the capability and support to transform our response to these cases, that we are alive to new and emerging threats and that we use technology to our advantage.
We will measure our progress transparently on timeliness, casework quality, impact and the confidence of the public we serve, so that our ambition is matched by delivery.
GRACE ONONIWU, CBE
DIRECTOR GENERAL FOR LEGAL DELIVERY
Pillar 1: Enhancing capability and confidence
In an environment of increasing global instability and rapid technological change, organised crime gangs and fraudsters continue to adapt their methods to exploit new opportunities. As a result, SEOC cases are becoming more complex, digitally enabled and increasingly international in nature, placing growing demands on the criminal justice system. Around 70% of fraud cases referred to the CPS have an international element and 80% are cyber-enabled, one of the fastest‑growing crime types, driven by a low-risk, high-reward profile. These trends are contributing to a significant increase in the scale, complexity and volume of digital material that prosecutors must assess alongside rising caseload demands.
To address growing demand, complexity and capacity pressures, we have significantly expanded our workforce over the past five years. This has shifted the experience profile of our prosecutors, with more lawyers entering the CPS at an earlier stage in their criminal practice. While this growth is essential in meeting demand, it also means that we must focus on building specialist capability and confidence, so prosecutors are equipped to manage the complexity, scale and risk inherent in SEOC casework.
Given both the challenges we face now and those we anticipate in the future, strengthening our people’s capability and confidence is a central aim of this strategy. In complex SEOC cases, early, inquisitive prosecutorial engagement is critical to shaping investigations, adding strategic value and developing effective case strategies from the outset. We will therefore focus on building a confident, SEOC-capable workforce, supported to engage early and decisively even in a high-pressure operational environment.
We will invest in the continuous development of our people, ensuring prosecutors are effectively trained and supported by specialist expertise, including through our specialist units, empowering them to adopt a proactive and inquisitive approach, exercise sound judgement and identify the wider criminality that often underpins SEOC offending. We will ensure CPS engagement, advice and decision-making align with evolving policing structures and partnership frameworks in response to the Government’s programme of police reform. The proposals include plans to establish a National Police Service, which will reshape how serious and organised crime capability is organised and delivered across policing. As functions currently delivered through organisations such as the NCA and Police Regional Organised Crime Units (ROCUs) evolve within this model, there will be implications for how complex serious and organised crime investigations are structured, referred and progressed. The CPS will work closely with policing partners to shape and support effective engagement, including through early legal advice, case strategy development and collaboration on complex cases as these reforms are implemented, contributing to a coherent, whole system response to SEOC.
| Outcome | Activity |
|---|---|
| Our prosecutors have the expertise required to deal with SEOC cases | We will:
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| Our prosecutors take an inquisitive approach to SEOC cases, adding value to the investigation | We will:
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Case study
Major North East Organised Crime Group Jailed for Multi-Million Pound Drug Operation, October 2025
The leader of a major organised crime group and four associates responsible for distributing huge quantities of Class A drugs across the North-East of the country have been convicted.
Shaun Monaghan, 45, previously pleaded guilty to his role in running a criminal network that supplied multi-kilo quantities of cocaine, heroin and amphetamine to drug dealers and possessed dangerous weapons. His associates Bryn Bowden, James White, James Ramshaw, and Stephen Graham - who also pleaded guilty to their charges - were sentenced alongside him at Newcastle upon Tyne Crown Court.
The prosecution showed that in 2020, the organised crime group used EncroChat - an encrypted criminal communications network which has since been dismantled by law enforcement - to coordinate their activities. Expert analysis revealed they purchased over 51kg of cocaine, 19kg of heroin and 200kg of amphetamine for onward supply.
The case was investigated by Northumbria Police as part of the wider Operation Venetic - the National Crime Agency's investigation into EncroChat users.
Nigel James, specialist prosecutor from the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “Monaghan was the driving force behind a criminal enterprise that flooded communities with dangerous drugs and had access to weapons that posed a serious threat to public safety… He used EncroChat prolifically to communicate with his associates in the mistaken belief that it offered anonymity.
However, the messages allowed prosecutors to directly link Monaghan to storage of class A drugs and firearms and demonstrate him controlling the day-to-day running of this criminal business… International co-operation was also a key facet of this case, and CPS lawyers and our extradition unit worked with law enforcement agencies in Turkey, the UAE and Oman to ensure that members of this criminal group returned to the UK to face charges… This successful prosecution was possible through close working with Northumbria Police. We are pleased to have removed this dangerous criminal network from our streets and will be pursuing confiscation proceedings to remove any criminal assets from the group.”
Pillar 2: Securing the nation
SEOC poses a direct and growing threat to the safety, security and resilience of the United Kingdom as recognised in the Government’s National Security Strategy 2025. Its impacts extend beyond individual victims and local communities, affecting border security, national infrastructure, public confidence and the integrity of the international rules-based order. Criminal networks exploit global instability, operate across jurisdictions, leverage global supply chains, launder vast sums through complex financial systems, and increasingly intersect with national security threats, including hostile state activity and terrorist financing.
The threats we face in SEOC cases are continually evolving, and we must be prepared to respond to these changes through a system-wide approach across the criminal justice system, focused on disruption, resilience and long-term harm reduction. Online extortion, specifically "sextortion," has become a rapidly growing crime targeting young men and teenage boys, leading in some instances to tragic cases of suicide. Criminals, often operating from overseas, lure victims into sharing intimate images and then demand payment, threatening to release the images to friends and family.
Organised Immigration Crime (OIC), including people smuggling and human trafficking, also continues to endanger lives and undermine border security. These crimes are often coordinated from overseas, facilitated through online platforms and encrypted communications, and driven by significant financial gain. We are also increasingly seeing industrial scale offending models, so-called ‘scam factories’, where individuals may be trafficked, coerced or otherwise exploited into committing criminal acts. These models blur traditional distinctions between victims and offenders and present complex challenges for the criminal justice system.
At the same time, the convergence of serious organised crime, money laundering and terrorism presents an increasingly complex threat landscape. Criminal methodologies used to generate, move and conceal illicit funds are frequently repurposed to finance terrorism or support hostile state actors, obscuring the boundary between serious organised crime and national security threats. The CPS has a vital role in ensuring that money laundering prosecutions, confiscation and forfeiture powers, and ancillary orders are deployed robustly to disrupt these networks and remove the financial enablers of harm.
We are also seeing a growing trend in cases involving individuals acting on behalf of, or in support of, hostile states through economic crime, sanctions evasion, cyber-enabled offending and the misuse of financial systems. These cases sit at the intersection of serious organised crime and national security and require close alignment between the CPS’s SEOC and Counter Terrorism capabilities. Prosecuting such offending is essential not only to uphold the rule of law, but to protect national security, deter hostile activity, and reinforce the UK’s resilience to state‑linked threats.
The CPS plays a critical role in supporting the Border Security Command (BSC), working alongside law enforcement partners to ensure that criminal networks involved in OIC are disrupted through effective prosecutions and the use of the full range of available criminal and financial powers. Recent legislative developments, including new offences focused on conduct that endangers life during small‑boat crossings and provides important additional tools within the overall response to border security threats. The CPS has worked closely with law enforcement partners to ensure that these offences are applied consistently and proportionately, in line with existing prosecution guidance and agreed referral arrangements and are targeted at the most harmful actors within organised criminal networks as part of a wider disruption‑to‑prosecution approach.
Effective prosecution in this space plays a critical role in deterrence, upstream disruption and the protection of the UK’s borders, particularly where early legal advice can shape investigations, enable the use of appropriate offences, and support international cooperation from the outset.
In this context, the CPS’s role goes beyond responding to offending that has already occurred. Early engagement, proactive legal advice and joint case strategies with law enforcement and international partners are critical to disrupting harm before it escalates. By shaping investigations, supporting the use of appropriate powers, and ensuring that prosecutions reflect the full scale and seriousness of the criminality, the CPS contributes directly to a whole‑system response to serious organised crime and national security threats. This will include strengthening our engagement with key private sector partners, recognising their critical role in preventing, detecting and disrupting economic and organised crime.
Through this strategy, we will strengthen our contribution to securing the nation. We will ensure that prosecutors are prepared to respond to emerging threats, that asset recovery and financial disruption are embedded from the outset of cases, and that our SEOC and Counter Terrorism functions work seamlessly together where threats converge. In doing so, we will play our full part alongside criminal justice system and international partners in protecting the UK’s borders, disrupting serious organised crime, and safeguarding national security.
| Outcome | Activity |
|---|---|
| We are prepared to respond to new and emerging SEOC threats | We will:
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| We play an active role, as part of a joint criminal justice response, in disrupting the SOC threat | We will:
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| We prioritise asset recovery at the outset of a case | We will:
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Case study
Securing international justice in a multi-million-pound people-smuggling operation, May 2025
Between October 2022 and June 2023, Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid conspired with others outside the UK to illegally smuggle migrants from Libya to Italy. The criminal network advertised crossings on Facebook, charging over £3,200 per person to make the dangerous journey on boats that were unsuitable for carrying large numbers of passengers. During the offending period, authorities intercepted seven crossings involving 3,781 migrants and overall, it’s estimated that the group earned around £12.3 million from this operation.
“This was a challenging case because of the need to evidence the extent and scale of the criminality which was largely based outside this jurisdiction” explains Tim Burton, Specialist Prosecutor in SEOCID. “It required close and effective working between our liaison prosecutors, the National Crime Agency (NCA) and Italian law enforcement and judicial authorities.”
“Together, we were able to successfully prove that Ebid was not a ‘humanitarian’ or low-ranking member of the network - as he claimed - but in fact, he played a leading role in a sophisticated operation which breached immigration laws and endangered lives, for his own and others’ financial gain.”
Pillar 3: Optimising our use of Tech and AI
SEOC is increasingly enabled, scaled and concealed by technology. Organised crime groups and fraudsters exploit digital platforms, encrypted communications, automation and emerging technologies to expand their reach, obscure criminality and operate across jurisdictions with speed and agility. As a result, SEOC cases now generate unprecedented volumes of complex digital material, placing significant demands on investigators, prosecutors and the courts. These challenges are compounded by fragmentation in data and systems across the criminal justice landscape, which can limit the timely and effective use of information across complex cases.
At the same time, the criminal justice system is operating under sustained pressure. Independent reviews have consistently highlighted that delay, inefficiency and the exponential growth of digital evidence are undermining the timely delivery of justice and public confidence in the system. These pressures are felt most acutely in serious and complex cases, including fraud, organised crime and cyber‑enabled offending, where digital material can overwhelm traditional processes and slow cases at every stage.
For the CPS, this creates a clear imperative. If we do not adapt our tools, systems and ways of working at pace, we risk falling behind both the threat and the system we serve. To prosecute effectively, safeguard fairness and deliver justice within a reasonable timeframe, the CPS must at least keep pace with those who seek to exploit technological complexity, digital volume and systemic delay. Phase 2 of the Independent Review of the Criminal Courts and the Independent Review of Disclosure and Fraud Offences, reinforce this direction of travel. They highlight the current disclosure regime is struggling to keep pace with the scale and nature of digital material, particularly in serious and complex cases. They identify technology enabled solutions as essential to modernising disclosure, reducing administrative burden and supporting consistency and fairness in the digital age. Failure to address these challenges risks not only delay, but case collapse, miscarriages of justice and further erosion of confidence in the justice system.
Sitting at the heart of the system between police and the courts, the CPS is uniquely placed to see both the challenges and opportunities at every stage of the system, and provide insights needed to enable effective reform. We must work with criminal justice partners to support a more joined-up, interoperable digital environment that reduces duplication, improves data quality, enables earlier collaboration and supports case progression, while preserving prosecutorial independence and judicial oversight. As an independent prosecutor, we must also ensure that our processes and tools enable early, well-informed decision-making; proportionate management of large volumes of material; and effective, compliant disclosure.
Our approach to technology and AI will be principled, ethical and transparent, and remain aligned with the CPS’s current and future AI mission statements. AI will augment, not replace, human decision-making. Used responsibly, it can help prosecutors identify evidential issues earlier, manage complex datasets more effectively, improve consistency and quality, and release time to focus on complex legal judgement and advocacy. Used poorly, or not at all, it risks entrenching inefficiency, increasing delay and undermining trust at a critical moment for the criminal justice system.
Through this strategy, we will modernise how we use technology and AI to support SEOC prosecutions. We will explore opportunities for secure, interoperable digital tools that improve decision-making, support modernised disclosure and drive efficiencies across the system. In doing so, we will help ensure that justice keeps pace with the evolving threat, that serious and complex cases are progressed fairly and proportionately, and that confidence in the criminal justice system is strengthened rather than diminished.
| Outcome | Activity |
|---|---|
| We explore opportunities for digital tools, interoperable with other parts of the criminal justice system, to support cases with large volumes of material | We will:
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| We explore the use of AI and new technology in line with our CPS AI mission statement to improve efficiency through our future casework tools project to support our prosecutors to deliver increased casework quality | We will:
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Case study
Man who created ‘one-stop shop for phishing’ jailed, April 2025
A man responsible for running a global phishing service, used by scammers to trick people into handing over their details, has been jailed.
Zak Coyne, 24, used his technical expertise to facilitate extensive fraudulent conduct worldwide by creating and running a subscription-based service for fraudsters via a website called LabHost. Coyne, of Huddersfield, appeared in Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court on 14 April 2025 after previously pleading guilty to making or supplying articles for use in fraud, encouraging or assisting the commission of an offence and transferring criminal property. He was sentenced to eight-and-a-half-years' imprisonment.
Thomas Short, Specialist Prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “Zak Coyne operated a phishing service that provided fraudsters with the tools to impersonate trusted institutions and steal sensitive information from unsuspecting victims… This was a sophisticated worldwide criminal enterprise which enabled others to perpetrate fraud on a massive scale, resulting in losses totalling more than £100 million… Fraud is far from a victimless crime and the harm caused by Coyne’s offending are measured not just in monetary terms, but also in the distress inflicted on countless victims who fell prey to these scams… This was a complex case, but the prosecution team, together with law enforcement partners, was able to unravel an intricate web of digital evidence which linked Coyne to the offending and build a strong case against him, resulting in his guilty pleas… The CPS will be pursuing confiscation proceedings against the defendant to recover his ill-gotten gains and prevent him from financially benefitting from his criminality. Also, because of the severity of the offending, we will be making an application for a Serious Crime Prevention Order to make sure that Coyne does not engage in similar offending when he is eventually released.”
Assurance and Delivery
Delivery of this strategy will be supported by a single, integrated governance structure, providing oversight of progress and ensuring coordinated delivery alongside the International 2030 Strategy. This approach will support the translation of strategic ambition into practical outcomes for the CPS and its cross-agency partners, with a continued focus on delivery against agreed outcomes. Progress will be subject to regular review through this framework, including monitoring against key actions, milestones and success measures. A midpoint progress report will be published to provide transparency on delivery, assess emerging priorities, and support any necessary reprioritisation.
Conclusion
This strategy sets out how the CPS will respond to the evolving threat from serious economic and organised crime, strengthening our capability, partnerships and contribution to the wider criminal justice system. Delivery will require sustained focus, collaboration and adaptability as the operating environment continues to change. Through the approach set out in this strategy, the CPS will continue to support effective outcomes and contribute to a coherent, whole-system response to serious and organised crime.