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.legategroup.co.uk/

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

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https://www.tritontrak.com/

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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
Organised vehicle crime is no longer a collection of thefts. It is an ecosystem. It is not random or opportunistic. It is structured, deliberate and driven by profit. To reduce it effectively, we must understand how organised crime gangs actually operate, not just how they steal vehicles, but how they organise, protect, and grow their activity. At its core, organised vehicle crime works like a business. The theft itself is only one part of a wider system built around demand, movement, concealment, and resale. These groups are rarely informal networks. More often, they are structured operations with clear roles, divided responsibilities, and deliberate separation between those who take the risks and those who control the profits. Most operations begin with research. Organised groups track which vehicles are in demand, which parts sell quickly and which markets, including overseas markets, offer strong returns. Certain makes and models are targeted not simply because they are valuable, but because they can be turned into cash quickly, either by dismantling them for parts or exporting them. Theft is often planned in advance, with specific vehicles identified before any offence takes place. Roles within these groups are clearly divided. One team may be responsible for stealing vehicles, often using electronic methods, or obtaining keys. Another group may move vehicles across police force areas to reduce the chance of detection. Vehicles are sometimes stored temporarily in so-called cooling-off locations while criminals check for tracking devices or police attention. Those involved at each stage may not know the full picture, which protects the wider network if arrests are made. From there, decisions are taken about the vehicle’s future. It may be dismantled for parts, cloned, or prepared for export. Each route is chosen based on risk, speed, and potential profit. Dismantling operations can be highly organised. High-value components are removed first, including lighting units, driver assistance systems, infotainment equipment, hybrid batteries, and catalytic converters. As vehicles become more technologically advanced, individual parts have become more valuable. Once removed from the vehicle, those parts are harder to trace and can enter secondary markets where checks and standards vary. Vehicle cloning has also become more sophisticated. It is no longer just a case of copying number plates. Criminals manipulate vehicle identity, exploiting gaps between registration systems, online sales platforms, and cross-border information sharing. The aim is to make a stolen vehicle appear legitimate for as long as possible. The longer it remains undetected, the greater the profit. Export routes remain a significant part of the operating model. Organised crime gangs use transport networks, shipping containers, and fraudulent documentation to move high-value vehicles quickly out of local policing areas and sometimes out of the UK altogether. In some cases, vehicles stolen in the UK can be overseas within 24 hours. Speed is critical to the model. The faster a vehicle leaves its original policing area, the harder recovery becomes. Once it crosses international borders, disruption becomes significantly more complex. What makes organised vehicle crime particularly challenging is its ability to adapt. When vehicle security improves, criminals look for new vulnerabilities. When enforcement activity increases at one port, movement shifts elsewhere. When certain vehicles become harder to steal, attention turns to parts theft. These groups constantly assess risk and adjust their approach. Their strength lies in flexibility. Organised vehicle crime also differs from high-volume theft because it is managed. There is coordination, oversight, and profit sharing. Money generated from stolen vehicles and parts does not always remain within vehicle crime. It can feed into wider organised criminal activity, including funding firearms and drug supply networks. Stolen vehicles are used to commit other serious offences, homicides, firearms discharges, and robberies, to name just a few. Vehicle crime should therefore be viewed as part of the broader serious and organised crime landscape. For policing, government, and industry, understanding how organised crime gangs operate means looking beyond individual offences and examining where systems can be exploited. Where are vehicles easiest to sell? Where are identity checks weakest? Where is information not shared quickly enough? Organised groups identify these gaps and use them to their advantage. This is why the response must also be coordinated. The National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership exists to bring together law enforcement, insurers, manufacturers, government agencies, and other partners to share insight and build a clearer picture of the threat. No single organisation sees the entire operating model. Only through partnership can those separate insights be combined into effective disruption. Understanding how organised crime gangs operate is not simply about describing tactics. It is about recognising the system behind them and strengthening our collective response. If vehicle crime is organised, commercially aware and adaptable, then our prevention and disruption activity must be equally organised, equally informed, and equally adaptable. That is the role NVCRP is committed to advancing. Seen through this lens, the organised crime processes described above explain exactly why the National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership structured its three-year national strategy around five clear areas of focus. Each pillar is designed to disrupt a specific part of the organised vehicle crime ecosystem, targeting the vulnerabilities that these groups rely on to research demand, move vehicles, manipulate identity, monetise parts and reinvest profits. Improving national intelligence capability is fundamental to this approach. Stronger, shared intelligence allows emerging trends, target vehicles, active routes, and criminal methodologies to be identified earlier and understood more clearly. That intelligence must then be matched with an investigative capability able to operate across force boundaries, reflecting the reality that organised vehicle crime does not respect geographic or organisational lines. Building investigative models that are national, coordinated and intelligence-led is essential if enforcement is to keep pace with highly mobile and adaptive organised crime gangs. Equally critical is building resilience beyond policing. Working with industry, law enforcement, academia, and government to strengthen controls at ports directly addresses one of the most exploited stages of the criminal process: rapid movement and export. Alongside this, the strategy places clear emphasis on research, innovation and development, using academic insight and new technology to detect, deter and disrupt organised vehicle crime more effectively. That knowledge must also reach the frontline, equipping officers with the training and awareness needed to identify key indicators of organised theft and intervene earlier. Together, these pillars ensure the response mirrors the threat: coordinated, informed and adaptive, precisely what is required to disrupt organised vehicle crime at scale.

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Motorcycles play an important role in the UK’s transport system. They offer affordable mobility, help reduce congestion, and are relied upon by commuters, couriers, tradespeople and enthusiasts alike. However, despite advances in security and awareness, motorbike theft remains a persistent issue across the country. For many victims, the theft of a motorcycle is not simply an inconvenience. It can mean losing access to work, losing income, or facing months of disruption. In some cases, it leads riders to stop riding altogether. Reducing motorcycle theft starts with understanding why it happens and what genuinely helps prevent it.   Why motorcycles continue to be targeted Motorcycles continue to feature heavily in vehicle theft figures. Their size and weight make them easier to move, and they are often parked in open or shared spaces rather than behind locked doors. Even well-maintained bikes can be stolen quickly if security is limited, predictable or poorly positioned. Demand also plays a significant role. Stolen motorcycles may be sold intact, dismantled for parts, or exported overseas by organised criminal groups. Parts in particular can be difficult to trace once separated from the bike, making them attractive to offenders. The growth of online resale platforms has further increased the speed at which stolen bikes and components can be moved on. Policing operations linked to major motorcycling events highlight both the scale of the problem and what works when theft is taken seriously. During the 2025 Isle of Man TT period, Merseyside Police delivered significant reductions in motorbike theft across Liverpool as part of Operation Needle. With funding from the National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership, and in collaboration with rider and industry organisations including The Motorcycle Action Group and the British Motorcyclists Federation (BMF), the operation combined intelligence-led enforcement with practical prevention activity. This joined-up approach demonstrates how properly resourced, targeted action during high-risk periods can reduce theft and protect riders.Read more: https://nvcrp.org/news/2025/8/joinedup-approach-to-bike-theft-delivers-2025-tt-victory/ The personal impact of motorbike theft Behind every theft statistic is an individual rider. Many people rely on their motorcycle as their main form of transport. When it is stolen, daily routines can collapse overnight. The longer-term impact can be just as serious. Insurance excesses and rising premiums can make replacing a bike difficult, while repeated theft or attempted theft can cause lasting stress and loss of confidence. For professional riders, including couriers and delivery workers, theft can result in immediate loss of income and uncertainty about future work.   How motorcycle theft commonly happens Some motorcycle theft is opportunistic, but many incidents involve planning. Offenders may identify locations where bikes are regularly parked, return at quieter times, and arrive equipped to defeat common security measures. Bikes may be lifted into vehicles by multiple offenders, making them quick to remove even when locked. In other cases, locks are attacked directly, particularly if they are thin, poorly positioned or not secured to an immovable object. Predictable parking routines and poorly lit locations can significantly increase risk. Importantly, theft often happens in public places. Offenders rely on speed and confidence, knowing that passers-by may assume the activity is legitimate or may not feel able to intervene.   The role of technology and recovery While prevention is always the priority, recovery remains a critical part of reducing the overall harm caused by motorcycle theft. A recovery at Tilbury docks reported in June 2025, where stolen motorbikes worth around £350,000 were intercepted before being exported, underlines how organised these crimes can be.Read more: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1denv9eg6wo This case shows exactly why vehicle tracking technology is such a vital tool in the fight against theft. The ability to locate stolen motorcycles not only improves recovery rates but also helps law enforcement disrupt wider criminal networks involved in large-scale vehicle export. When tracking technology is combined with targeted policing and intelligence sharing, it becomes far harder for organised groups to operate undetected.   Understanding what deters theft Most motorcycle thieves are not looking for the most valuable bike. They are looking for the easiest one to steal. Time, noise, effort, and risk all influence their decisions. A bike that is clearly well protected, with strong locks, visible security and signs of traceability, presents a higher risk than one secured with minimal measures. When several bikes are parked together, the one with the weakest protection is more likely to be targeted. Practical steps to reduce the risk of motorbike theft Focus area What to do Why it helps Physical security Use a high-quality chain + lock. Add a second lock type (e.g., chain + alarmed disc lock). Adds time and effort; increases noise and risk for thieves. Anchor the bike Secure the bike to an immovable object (ground anchor/secure rail/fixed structure) whenever possible. Prevents “lift and load” thefts and makes removal far harder. Lock placement Keep chains off the ground. Lock through the frame or rear wheel (not just a wheel). Place disc locks visibly. Makes attacks more difficult and improves deterrence. Parking choices Choose well-lit areas with footfall and natural surveillance. Avoid quiet, hidden corners. Reduces opportunities and increases the chance of attention if a theft is attempted. Reduce routine If practical, vary where you park, especially overnight. Predictability allows offenders to plan; variation disrupts this. Home security Use a locked garage if available. If not, add a ground anchor, locked gates, security lighting and (where possible) CCTV. Strengthens the “home base” where many bikes are targeted. Electronic security Use alarms/immobilisers. Consider a tracker (professionally fitted and maintained). Deters opportunists; improves recovery chances and can disrupt organised theft. Make it harder to sell Use forensic marking and visible deterrent labels. Keep records: reg, VIN, make/model, colour, clear photos. Reduces resale value and supports identification/recovery. Everyday habits Lock the bike every time, even for short stops. Use the steering lock alongside other security. Park with other well-secured bikes when possible. Removes “easy win” moments thieves rely on. Report suspicious behaviour If you see people checking locks, circling parked bikes, or attempting to load a bike into a van, report it promptly. Timely reports can prevent thefts and protect other riders.   Prevention is a shared effort Reducing motorcycle theft requires action at multiple levels. Riders play a vital role through good security and awareness, but wider factors such as secure parking provision, the design of streets and public spaces, retailer standards and intelligence-led enforcement are also important. Information sharing between riders, communities and organisations helps build a clearer picture of risk and supports targeted prevention. Over time, this collective approach makes theft harder, riskier and less profitable.   Looking ahead Motorcycle theft is not inevitable. When security is layered, environments are designed with safety in mind, and awareness remains high, opportunities for theft are reduced. This protects riders, supports sustainable transport and helps maintain confidence in public spaces. Keeping security strong, choosing safer places to park and staying informed can all help reduce motorcycle theft.

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As 2025 draws to a close, it marks the end of a highly productive year for the National Vehicle Crime Reduction Partnership. The year included an important milestone for the Partnership, which celebrated its first anniversary in November. In just over twelve months, the NVCRP has established itself as a credible national body, delivering measurable outcomes and strengthening the UK’s response to organised vehicle crime through a clear strategy and coordinated action. Mark Kameen MSc, NVCRP Project Lead, said: “2025 has shown what can be achieved when we take a coordinated approach and keep delivery at the centre of everything we do. We’ve strengthened national capability, supported forces with practical activity, and made sure the organised vehicle crime threat is being understood in the right places. Just as importantly, we’ve brought people together, across policing, government, industry, and specialist partners, to share intelligence, align priorities and act at pace. The progress this year is a solid platform to build on as we move into 2026, with even stronger partnership working and a continued focus on measurable impact.”   Launch of the National Vehicle Crime Strategy A key achievement during 2025 was the national launch of the National Vehicle Crime Strategy, led by the NVCRP. The Strategy sets out a clear, three-year framework for tackling organised vehicle crime through five strategic pillars, providing a consistent national direction for enforcement, prevention, intelligence development, and partnership working. The Strategy has underpinned activity throughout the year, supporting the alignment of policing, government, and industry efforts, and providing a strong foundation for securing investment, driving delivery, and measuring impact. It has been communicated widely across national and international forums and continues to guide the Partnership’s priorities.   Building Capability Through Targeted Investment A major achievement in 2025 has been the NVCRP’s success in securing Home Office grant funding to strengthen national intelligence capability. This funding increased the Opal establishment from one to three staff, tripling capacity and securing those posts for the next two years. In parallel, the NVCRP and NaVCIS jointly funded a fourth Opal post from their own budgets for a 12-month period. Combined, these investments have delivered a 300% increase in Opal staffing within the Partnership’s first year, significantly enhancing the quality, depth, and responsiveness of the national intelligence picture. Further Home Office funding was secured to support two additional NaVCIS staff for a short-term analytical project focused on Ports. This work will deliver a comprehensive Ports Problem Profile, analysing five years of data to identify offenders, criminal methodologies, export routes, and the commercial enablers used in the illicit export of stolen vehicles.   Delivering National Enforcement Impact The NVCRP has consistently translated strategy into operational activity. A standout success was the securing of £275,000 from the Home Office to fund Operation Alliances II, a national week of action involving 37 police forces across England and Wales, supported by private sector partners. The operation delivered significant enforcement outcomes and generated 222 actionable intelligence logs, strengthening future disruption activity. Beyond this, the NVCRP has directly funded investigative activity across multiple forces, including Essex, West Midlands, the Metropolitan Police, West Yorkshire, and Merseyside, supporting priority investigations aligned to national threat assessments. Investment has also been made in specialist capability. NVCRP funding enabled officers in South Yorkshire Police to qualify as QSVE, addressing a strategic skills gap. This directly supported a partnership operation targeting a large-scale ‘chop shop,’ where stolen vehicles were successfully identified using newly trained staff, with additional support from JLR specialists. Industry engagement has continued to deliver tangible benefits. Jaguar Land Rover, facilitated by the NVCRP, provided significant investment to West Midlands Police, enabling the recruitment of dedicated Police Staff Investigators focused on vehicle crime.   Influencing National Policy and Thinking During 2025, the NVCRP’s work and approach were reflected in a report published by the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), which called for the creation of a national investigative body and stronger national coordination of the police, partner, and industry response to organised vehicle crime. The NVCRP had already developed an action plan aligned to these principles, including strengthening Port security, closing intelligence gaps, modernising legislation, and enhancing vehicle security through manufacturer collaboration and rapid intelligence sharing, all of which featured in the RUSI report’s recommendations. RUSI recognised the critical role played by the NVCRP in tackling organised vehicle crime, highlighting the Partnership’s ability to foster cross-sector collaboration and proactive security thinking as essential to staying ahead of evolving criminal threats.   Ports, Policy, and Ministerial Engagement Addressing the vulnerability of UK Ports has been a central strategic priority. During 2025, the NVCRP coordinated a law-enforcement, Ministerial-led roundtable at the Home Office, focused on clarifying organisational responsibilities and identifying opportunities to strengthen enforcement and prevention activity at Ports. The Partnership also delivered a closed briefing to the former Policing Minister, Diana Johnson, highlighting the scale and complexity of organised vehicle crime, particularly the export of stolen vehicles, and setting out the case for additional investment to support delivery of the NVCRP Strategy. Ongoing briefings to senior stakeholders, including the Home Office, Europol, Interpol, BIFA and Dr Rick Muir, Advisor to the Home Secretary, have ensured consistent messaging around the threat and the Partnership’s response. This sustained engagement contributed directly to the NVCRP securing approximately £700,000 in grant funding during 2025.   International Collaboration and Influence The NVCRP’s work has gained increasing international recognition. Alongside NaVCIS, NPCC and Opal, the Partnership attended the 5th Interpol Global Vehicle Crime Conference in Lyon, where NVCRP and NaVCIS delivered a presentation outlining the Partnership model and the NVCRP National Strategy, which closely aligned with approaches adopted by international counterparts. During the conference, the NVCRP worked with partner nations to build support for a Ports-focused recommendation examining vulnerabilities in the export of stolen vehicles. This recommendation was formally raised, ratified, and is now progressing, with the NPCC arranging next steps with Interpol. Additional international engagement included attendance at a Europol vehicle crime conference on Port vulnerabilities, as well as meetings with Canadian representatives, the Department for Trade and Chief Officers of Ports Police, to share best practices and explore opportunities for strengthening controls. The NVCRP is also working with the Global Initiative on a further paper examining organised vehicle crime and destination markets.   Communications, Visibility and Public Confidence The NVCRP website has continued to develop throughout 2025, offering expanded content including crime prevention advice, blogs, and news updates. Membership has now grown to over 300 organisations. To strengthen reach and consistency, the NVCRP appointed Purple PR to deliver an increased volume of professional communications, including social media updates on operational activity, partnerships, conferences, and prevention messaging. As a result, LinkedIn followers have grown significantly. This work supports the delivery of Pillar 5 of the NVCRP Strategy and reinforces the Partnership’s credibility with government and potential future funders. The NVCRP has also engaged extensively with national media, including The Times, ITN, Police Insight Magazine, Professional Security Magazine, and the Daily Mail, raising awareness of organised vehicle crime, its impact on communities and industry, and providing crime prevention advice. Operation Alliances II generated widespread national coverage. The Partnership has communicated its three-year Strategy at major conferences throughout the year, including Interpol, Europol, The Police Foundation at RUSI, SMMT, Selectamark, IAATI and the Road Haulage Association.   December Update: Collaboration in Practice To end the year, Mark Kameen, attended The Police Foundation event on “The Role of Private–Public Partnerships in Tackling Theft and Fraud” at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in Whitehall. Mark participated in a panel discussion chaired by Dame Sara Thornton DBE QPM, alongside senior leaders from policing and industry. The discussion reinforced the importance of structured public–private collaboration, reflecting a key recommendation from The Police Foundation report: that the Government should actively encourage partnerships between policing and the private sector and provide a clear policy framework to support them.   Looking Ahead As the NVCRP enters 2026, it does so with strengthened capability, increased influence, and a proven ability to deliver against national priorities. The progress made during 2025 provides a strong foundation for continued delivery of the NVCRP Strategy and further reductions in organised vehicle crime.   The NVCRP thanks everyone who has supported, contributed to, and engaged with the Partnership over the past year. Your commitment, expertise and collaboration have helped drive real progress. Together, we are strengthening the national response to organised vehicle crime and building the foundations for even greater impact in 2026.

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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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