Fourteen police and IT security experts have been named to the Canadian Advanced Technology Allianceโs newly-created cybercrime advisory council, to inform the high tech lobby group on policy and help police forces learn how to leverage technology.
In an interview Tuesday morning just before the advisory council was to start its first working session, CATA chief business officer Wennekes said the idea of the council came from a 2014 cybercrime conference CATA held with chiefs of police. โThey all said โItโs great to learn more how to protect our data, our systems, but the other side of the story that isnโt being told is the criminal investigation component and the (technology) challenges there โ identifying, managing, tracking digital evidence, and even common issues like not having a central lexicon (of technology terms) and a central resource of knowledge.โ
Kevin Wennekes said the association wants to not only identify major technology issues facing law enforcement in fighting cybercrime but also to help CATA showcase leading Canadian innovations fromย its corporate members.
โItโs clear cybercrime respects no boundaries, be they geographic or an individualโs own home or business walls,โ he said. โIt will be critical this council seeks out and secures the future involvement of other key stakeholders not only in Canada, but globally as well. The work is only just beginning and we will welcome the interest and support of other law enforcement, academic, government and corporate partners.โ
The advisory council will help define cybercrime, establish a dictionary of technology terms, identify capability gaps, recognize and promote champions and expertise, outline needed research and establish a toolkit of innovative technologies and services available to law enforcement agents.
The advisory council is another way Canadian organizations and infosec pros are coming together to help fight cyber crime.
Members of CATAโs cybercrime advisory council include
โย Chief superintendent Jeff Adam of the RCMP, who as director general of technical investigation services oversees the forcesโ technical investigative support in a number of areas including cybercrime;
โEldon D. Amoroso, former director of support services for the London, Ont. police service and currently a public safety consultant;
โSuperintendent Paul Beesley, director of the Ontario Provincial Policeโs behavioural, forensic and electronic services;
โDr. Mourad Debbabie, president of the National Cyber Forensics and Training Alliance Canada;
โPatrick Doyle, who teaches graduate courses on law enforcement information-sharing and security topics;
โBenoit Dupont, scientific director at the University of Montrealโs Smart Cybersecurity Network (SERENE);
โRitesh Kotak, a consultant to police departments, organizations and government on using social media and digital technology;
โLianna McDonald, executive director of the Canadian Centre for Child Protection;
โEugene Ng, ย cybersecurity leader for Eastern Canada for the accounting MNP LLP;
โChristine Robson, IT manager for theย Durham (Ont.) Regional Police;
โPeter Sloly, a former Toronto deputy police chief and currently an executive at Deloitte Canada, where he specializes in modernizing organizations and cyber crime;
โNorman Taylor, president of the Global Network for Community Safety;
โScott Tod, deputy chief of police of the North Bay (Ont.) Police Service;
โandย Alan Treddenick, director of national security atย BlackBerry.
Formation of the advisory council comes after CATA released aย Canadian Law Enforcement Cybercrime Priorities and Needs Report last fallย after holding a national policing cybercrime summit.
Its recommendations included creating regional cybercrime centres of excellence, more collaboration between law enforcement, governments, industry and academia, more people and technology devoted to fighting cybercrime, an updated federal lawful access policy, more attention to critical infrastructure threats and a national cybercrime strategy.
Related Download
Sponsor: SAS
Improving the State of Affairs With Analytics
Download this case study-rich white paper to learn why data management and analytics are so crucial in the public sector, and how to put it to work in your organization.
Register Now