On 22 May 2014 at around 22:50, NCA officers were involved in a shootout in
Tottenham. Several shots were fired, including from NCA officers. Two men were arrested at the scene by the NCA for
attempted murder and possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life. The Metropolitan Police arrived and arrested a third man for
possession of a firearm. This is believed to be the first incident in which NCA officers fired shots. On 25 May 2014 at 00:00, a second NCA operation was carried out in Tottenham, along with officers from the Metropolitan Police, after the NCA received intelligence about the earlier shoot out. Two more men were arrested, one for attempted murder and possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life and the other for assisting an offender, after their car was stopped by armed officers. One shot was fired by a Metropolitan Police officer during the operation. In May 2014, the NCA conducted a major operation that resulted in the seizing of more than 100 kg of
cocaine from a Greek
bulk freighter in Scotland. The ship had been returning from
Colombia; the operation resulted in the arrest of three men. In July 2014, the NCA with partners jointly disrupted the "Shylock" banking
trojan believed to have infected at least 30,000 computers. Also in July 2014, the NCA co-ordinated the arrest of 660 suspected paedophiles. 39 of those arrested were
registered sex offenders, but the majority had not previously come to the attention of law enforcement. 400 children are believed to have been protected by this operation, which included apprehending several individuals who had unsupervised access to children such as doctors, teachers and care workers. In November 2016, the NCA began a campaign, including releasing a video, to educate the public on
sextortion, providing advice on protecting oneself from being subject to sextortion and how to respond to a case of online blackmail. On 2 July 2020, the NCA reported it had co-ordinated the largest law enforcement operation of its kind in the UK when it announced the results of Operation Venetic. Working with all the police forces of the UK and other law enforcement bodies, officers made 746 arrests and seized £54 million of drug money, 77 firearms, 1,800 rounds of ammunition, 4 hand grenades, 55 high value (possibly stolen) cars and 2 tonnes of illegal drugs. The operation was possible after an international law enforcement team cracked the encryption of a mobile phone
instant messaging service from
EncroChat. Law enforcement in
France and the
Netherlands also carried out related operations with the assistance of
Europol. On 20 February 2024 the NCA, in collaboration with
Europol and other law enforcement agencies, announced that it had seized websites and infrastructure belonging to the
ransomware group
LockBit. Over 1,000 decryption keys were obtained, with the victims of the attacks to be contacted about the decryption of their data. On 4 December 2024, the NCA revealed
Operation Destabilise, an NCA-led international investigation into two Russian money laundering networks, Smart and TGR Group. The two networks had links to criminal organisations in the UK,
drug cartels in
South America, the
Kinahan Organised Crime Group, Russian espionage efforts, and
sanction avoidance. The investigation up to that point had led to the arrest of 84 people, 71 of whom were arrested in the UK, while six individuals, both major money laundering networks and several companies had been sanctioned, while a seventh linked individual was arrested for the facilitation of money laundering. In total, approximately £20 million had been seized out of an estimated £700 million in drugs sales. ==See also==