NVCRP
Pledge

The National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership (NVCRP) pledges to lead a coordinated, intelligence-driven response to the growing threat of organised vehicle crime across the UK. With vehicle theft now recognised as a serious and evolving form of organised crime, the NVCRP commits to uniting policing, industry, and government in a shared mission to disrupt the networks behind these offences. This pledge underpins a new national framework that prioritises proactive investigation, cross-border collaboration, and the use of advanced technology to identify and bring the most harmful offenders to justice.

Our commitment is to build lasting resilience within the UK’s vehicle crime ecosystem by empowering law enforcement with the tools, intelligence, and partnerships they need to act decisively. Working alongside the National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service (NaVCIS), OPAL, and industry leaders such as Toyota and JLR, the NVCRP will ensure that efforts to combat organised vehicle crime are strategic, evidence-based, and sustainable. Above all, we pledge to protect individuals, businesses, and communities from the far-reaching impact of vehicle crime and to make the UK a safer place to live and work.

Welcome to NVCRP website
The NVCRP brings together police, government and industry to reduce vehicle crime.
Membership Criteria

Eligibility to join the NVCRP will be based upon the applicant meeting membership criteria below

  • A recognised UK Motor Manufacturing organisation, or
  • A member of law enforcement e.g. Police, National Crime Agency (NCA), Regional Organised Crime Unit (ROCU), National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service (NaVCIS), Opal, or
  • UK Government department or a recognised automotive trade organisation, or
  • Local Government or Office of Police and Crime Commissioners
  • Vehicle Security Providers
  • Be a UK registered company

Applicants who do not meet the above criteria can still apply for membership of the NVCRP but must clearly state why they wish to join. These applications will be considered against the aims and objectives of the scheme and on a case-by-case basis.

Enquiries may be conducted to determine the veracity of any application and to support any decisions taken regarding the acceptance or rejection of the submission.

No applicant has an automatic right to NVCRP membership.

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Theft prevention tips for commercial vehicles

Downloadable guides on commercial vehicle theft prevention advice for business owners and fleet managers. These guides provide a wealth of actionable tips to significantly help reduce the risk of your vehicle being targeted by thieves.

 

Theft prevention tips for car drivers

Comprehensive downloadable guides on vehicle theft prevention advice. From securing your car with alarms and immobilizers to the prevention of other types of vehicle theft. These guides offer actionable tips to help reduce the risk of your vehicle being stolen.

Theft prevention tips for motorcyclists

For motorcycle and scooter owners, these downloadable guides on theft prevention can provide invaluable guidance. These resources offer advice on securing your bike or scooter, such as installing alarms and immobilizers. They also cover strategies for deterring other types of two-wheeled vehicle theft.

Working with police, government and industry

Below are a selection of industry organisations and vehicle manufacturers we work with. Please click a logo below to be take to their website.

https://www.globalim.co.uk/

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https://www.tritontrak.com/

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https://www.inn-track.co.uk/

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Do you have any questions?

Please use the contact us form to send a message to the NVCRP team.

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Chief Inspector Oli Fisher

Police Tactical Lead

Mark Kameen

Project Lead

Andy Wood

Partnership Coordinator

Frequently Asked Questions

Please see our Frequently Asked Questions section which we hope you will find useful. If there is something that isn't covered here, please email using the 'Contact Us' section.

What is NVCRP

The National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership has been created by the National Police Chiefs Council, the Home Office and vehicle manufacturers. This national scheme brings law enforcement and Industry together to enhance intelligence sharing and analysis, build effective networks to implement and coordinate projects that are designed to target offenders and prevent vehicle crime from occurring. The NVCRP would welcome the opportunity to discuss and support partnership-based crime prevention ideas and opportunities.

How do I become a member of the NVCRP?

You can apply for membership on the 'Become a member page' on our website. Please note that whilst we encourage membership of the NVCRP, applicants will need to meet certain criteria to ensure the integrity of our work.

What are the benefits of becoming a member of the NVCRP?

Membership of the NVCRP is exclusive to those that meet our strict membership criteria. The NVCRP are developing a knowledge hub with access to legislation, best practice, crime prevention projects, and related subject matter.

Membership of the NVCRP will develop and build the wider partnership and afford organisations cross-sector access with other members, skill sets and expert knowledge.

In time, the NVCRP will develop tactical and industry meetings which will afford members the opportunity to share intelligence, crime trends and concerns. The NVCRP will act as a central repository for these opportunities.

News
When the National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership (NVCRP) was launched just one year ago, it was born out of a simple but powerful vision: to unite policing, government, and industry behind a shared mission to drive down organised vehicle crime across the UK. Twelve months on, that vision has become a dynamic, coordinated force for change, aligning national strategy, securing funding, strengthening enforcement, and building the partnerships necessary to tackle one of the UK’s most complex criminal threats. Mark Kameen, Project Lead for the NVCRP, said: “Our first year has been about building the foundations for long-term change. We’ve shown what’s possible when policing, government, and industry come together with a shared purpose. The NVCRP is now a national driver of collaboration and innovation, ensuring that every effort to tackle vehicle crime is smarter, stronger, and more joined up than ever before.” A Strategy Built to Last The foundation of the NVCRP’s success is its National Vehicle Crime Strategy, the first of its kind in the UK. Developed through months of collaboration with policing, academia, and the motor industry, the strategy creates unity, consistency, and a shared direction for how funding, intelligence, and enforcement should be deployed. It sets out five strategic pillars that guide everything the partnership does, ensuring that every initiative, every investment, and every conversation drives toward long-term, sustainable change. Read the National Vehicle Crime Strategy   Taking the Message to the Top Leadership has been key to the NVCRP’s momentum. Project Lead, Mark Kameen, has taken the NVCRP message straight to the heart of government, securing several private briefings with the Policing Minister to raise awareness of the scale of the challenge and the funding required to tackle it. Working with the Home Office, Mark has also coordinated a Ministerial-led roundtable bringing together the NCA, Border Force, ports authorities, and senior law enforcement leaders, the first of its kind to address vehicle crime as a serious, organised threat. A second Ministerial roundtable, to be hosted in the near future, will focus on tightening freight security and stopping stolen vehicles from leaving UK shores in shipping containers. Turning Strategy into Action The NVCRP hasn’t just talked about change, it’s made it happen. Through effective lobbying and detailed planning, the partnership has secured Home Office funding for vehicle crime initiatives across UK police forces, alongside a £500,000 grant from the International Serious and Organised Crime Fund. This investment is fuelling: In-depth research into vehicle export routes and freight forwarder practices. New investigative posts at NaVCIS to target organised criminal groups. A national vehicle crime conference with RUSI in early 2026; and Operation Alliances II, a national week of action led by police and partners. Together, these projects represent a step-change in how the UK understands, prevents, and prosecutes organised vehicle crime. Power in Partnership The NVCRP has made collaboration its trademark. It has secured funding to expand the Opal Vehicle Crime Desk, boosting intelligence capacity; built on the strong collaboration between NaVCIS and Opal; and supported the deployment of Stolen Vehicle Examiners in high-crime regions. Partnerships with industry have also blossomed. The NVCRP’s work with Selectamark DNA Marking has delivered a large number of vehicle marking kits to hotspot areas, while collaborations with Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), Toyota, Tracker UK, and the Met Police are shaping a new national training programme for frontline officers to better identify theft devices and stolen vehicles.   Making an International Impact The NVCRP’s influence now extends across borders. In meetings with the Canadian Law Enforcement attaché, NVCRP leaders shared insights and best practices, learning from Canada’s government-backed approach to tackling vehicle crime. The partnership has also represented the UK at Europol HQ in The Hague, positioning itself as a key voice in Europe’s collective fight against organised vehicle theft and export. Amplifying the Message The NVCRP’s work is not confined to boardrooms and briefings; it’s building awareness across policing and industry through a new PR and communications programme designed to keep vehicle crime firmly on the national agenda. Project Lead Mark Kameen, along with Head of NaVCIS, Sharon Naughton, has briefed Dr Rick Muir, policing advisor to the Home Secretary, on the proven value of public–private collaboration, and presented at the NPCC Chief Constables’ Council, influencing national thinking on how to strengthen enforcement structures like Opal and NaVCIS.   Year One: Laying the Groundwork for Lasting Change In just twelve months, the NVCRP has gone from concept to cornerstone, setting strategy, securing funding, aligning national resources, and proving that partnership is the most powerful weapon in the fight against organised vehicle crime. As it enters its second year, the NVCRP will continue to build momentum, delivering the projects, partnerships, and policy influence that make a real, measurable difference. The message is clear: with unity, intelligence, and collaboration, the NVCRP is driving a new era of action against vehicle crime.

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The National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership (NVCRP) has secured £485,000 in Home Office funding, which has already led to over £1 million worth of stolen vehicles being recovered and more than 100 arrests as part of a national crackdown on organised vehicle crime. The coordinated week of action, known as Operation Alliances, was led by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) and brought together policing and key partners, including the National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service (NaVCIS) and Opal, the national policing intelligence unit for serious organised acquisitive crime. The NVCRP secured £275,000 in dedicated Home Office funding to support enforcement activity across 37 police forces in England and Wales, targeting the complex, international operations of serious organised crime groups (OCGs) involved in vehicle theft, cloning, and export. During Op Alliances six chop shops were located by police forces which are locations often used to dismantle stolen vehicles in order to sell or more easily export parts worth substantial amounts of money. Forces conducted 40 warrants and searches, locating additional chop shops, scrap yards and holding places for stolen vehicles. 76 intact suspected stolen vehicles were seized, including luxury cars, plant equipment and a number of motorcycles totalling more than £1m in value. Mark Kameen, NVCRP Lead, commented: “In October, we launched a three-year national strategy to tackle vehicle crime, calling on private industry, automotive manufacturers, insurers, and the security sector, to partner with the NVCRP and invest in activity like this. Our goal is to build a dedicated, cross-border investigative capability to take the fight to organised crime groups operating in this space. “The results of Operation Alliances were only made possible by the funding the NVCRP secured and clearly demonstrate what can be achieved when the right support and investment come together behind a common goal. It’s a powerful example of how targeted funding and strong partnerships can deliver real, tangible results in reducing vehicle crime. “The simple fact is, if we want to see sustained and effective enforcement and disruption at this level, we need to work alongside private industry to secure ongoing investment. This will enable the NVCRP to develop a truly national capability and response, one that can match the scale, sophistication, and reach of the organised criminal networks we are determined to dismantle.” During the week Mark attended an operation at Felixstowe along with Opal and NaVCIS where numerous stolen cars were recovered. The first container held three stolen cars with another two stolen vehicles and a motor cycle hidden at the back of a second container. Mark also visited Twelve Quays Dock in Birkenhead with Merseyside Police Targeted Team and their Rural Wildlife Teams were engaged in an operation looking for stolen vehicles and plant machinery. Crime and Policing Minister, Sarah Jones, said: “Without a car or van, many people are unable to work, take their children to school or care for their loved ones. Vehicle theft is a devastating crime that leaves families completely stuck. “As this operation has shown, it can often be linked to other serious criminality. That’s why we have boosted funding to support and sustain this enforcement activity, and are also bringing forward legislation to ban electronic devices used to steal vehicles. “I commend the officers and teams involved for bringing so many criminals to justice during this intensification week and look forward to seeing this great work continue.” The remaining £210,000 from the Home Office funding will be used by the NVCRP to fund additional dedicated vehicle crime resources in Opal and NaVCIS and support the development of a comprehensive problem profile through analysis of freight and container data to identify emerging trends and criminal methodologies linked to vehicle crime. The NVCRP funding follows a recent Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) report estimated that vehicle crime costs the UK economy more than £1.75 billion annually. The report also warned that OCGs have evolved into highly structured, technologically enabled networks, calling for the creation of a national body to lead investigative efforts, drive legislative reform, and secure tougher penalties. These recommendations are now embedded in the NVCRP’s three-year strategy, underpinning its mission to deliver a unified, intelligence-led approach to vehicle crime reduction.

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 By Mark Kameen, Lead, National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership (NVCRP) Organised vehicle crime has become one of the fastest-growing threats to our economy and communities. The days of opportunistic car theft are long gone. Today, sophisticated organised crime groups (OCGs) exploit advanced technology, global supply chains, and cross-border networks to steal, transport, and resell vehicles with alarming efficiency. The cost to the UK economy is staggering, more than £1.75 billion each year, according to the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI). Beyond the financial loss, these crimes undermine public confidence, harm businesses, and too often fund further serious and violent offending. Against this backdrop, the National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership (NVCRP) has launched a new three-year strategy, designed to transform how the UK tackles organised vehicle crime. A New National Capability At the heart of the strategy is the creation of a dedicated, cross-border investigative capability to identify, prosecute, and disrupt the highest-harm offenders. Vehicle crime is now highly sophisticated, organised and global, like many other forms of Serious Organised Crime, but policing can’t always dedicate the necessary level of resource and capabilities to effectively tackle all of these threats, they have to prioritise the highest harm crimes like child sexual exploitation and violence against women and girls. Working in partnership with the National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service (NaVCIS) and OPAL, the national acquisitive crime unit, the NVCRP will focus on intelligence sharing, specialist skills, and legislative reform to deliver lasting impact. Five Core Aims Our strategy is built around five priorities: Enhancing intelligence capabilities to build a truly national picture of the threat. Establishing an Organised Vehicle Crime Investigation capability dedicated to tackling the most dangerous OCGs. Improving resilience at UK ports, where stolen vehicles often leave the country within hours. Driving research, development, and training so policing stays ahead of criminals’ evolving methods. Raising awareness of organised vehicle crime and the preventative measures businesses and the public can take. This comprehensive approach balances enforcement with prevention, disruption with deterrence. Partnership is the Key As Assistant Chief Constable Sarah Grahame, the NPCC lead for vehicle crime, has rightly said: tackling this problem requires collaboration. Policing cannot do it alone. Manufacturers, insurers, logistics providers, and technology companies are essential partners in the fight. At the NVCRP, we are already working with leading manufacturers such as Toyota and JLR. But the scale of the challenge demands a broader coalition. We need more partners from across the automotive, insurance, and security sectors to join us. Organised vehicle crime is international by nature, and our response must be equally global, drawing on the expertise, innovation, and resources of all sectors. A Call to Action This strategy provides the framework, but success depends on sustainable funding, industry support, and political will. The RUSI report called for exactly this kind of national response: a body to drive investigative work, deliver legislative change, and ensure tougher penalties. We have now embedded those recommendations into a practical plan for action. My message is clear: organised vehicle crime is not inevitable. It is preventable, but only if we work together. The NVCRP stands ready to lead, but lasting progress will come through shared responsibility and collective action. If your organisation is committed to protecting customers, communities, and the integrity of the UK economy, I invite you to join us in this mission. Together, we can turn the tide against organised vehicle crime and make a tangible difference for victims, communities, businesses and the UK economy. To view the National Vehicle Crime Strategy, visit https://nvcrp.org/national-vehicle-crime-strategy/

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Videos
NVCRP interview with ACC Jenny Sims and Mark Kameen - Part 1NVCRP lead Mark Kameen had the opportunity to interview NPCC lead for vehicle crime ACC Jenny Sims, prior to her retirement from policing later this year. This is part one of a two part interview about Jenny's national work on vehicle crime , the role of the NVCRP and what she hopes will happen in the future regarding public/private partnerships to tackle the issue.

NVCRP interview with ACC Jenny Sims - Part 2Continuing on from Part 1, NVCRP Lead Mark Kameen speaks further with NPCC Lead for Vehicle Crime, ACC Jenny Sims, about the broader challenges and ongoing efforts in tackling vehicle crime. They discuss the importance of continued collaboration, stronger investigation, and the wider impact of vehicle crime beyond just theft and talk about the shared focus on the work still to be done.

Partnership approach - Interview with ACC Jenny SimsIn conversation with NVCRP Lead Mark Kameen, ACC Jenny Sims discusses the wider impact of vehicle crime, linking it to serious organised criminal activity. She highlights the profound effect on victims and the necessity for a unified law enforcement response.

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