WATCH VIDEO. The Spanish National Police (Policía Nacional) has dismantled a large criminal network illegally distributing audiovisual content to 2 million subscribers in Europe, Asia and the Middle East and laundering the criminal proceeds.
The investigation, supported by Europol and Eurojust, also involved law enforcement authorities from Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Italy, Germany, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Sweden, the UK and US.
In a statement, Europol says that on June 3 law enforcement authorities across the EU carried out 15 house searches, arrested 11 individuals (four in Spain, one in Germany, three in Sweden and three in Denmark) and interrogated 16 others for their possible involvement in the illegal scheme. The suspected leader of the criminal network is among the arrested individuals.
It adds that the actions resulted in the seizure of €4.8 million, including properties worth more than €2 million, four cars worth about €500,000, luxury watches, cash, cryptocurrencies and electronic equipment. Law enforcement authorities took down 50 IP addresses and part of the online criminal infrastructure, while 11 bank accounts totalling €1.1 million were also frozen.
Europol says that the investigation into the activities of the criminal network started in 2019 when the Spanish National Police detected several websites illegally distributing audiovisual content in different countries across Europe, Asia and the Middle East. The distribution of the illegal services, in breach with intellectual property rights, was set-up via IPTV and managed from Spain. The criminal network was offering illegally more than 40 000 TV channels, movies, documentaries and other digital content via websites hosted on an international network of servers. The illegal service was made available through an attractive web environment at prices much more competitive than the ones on the legal market. The criminal network had even put in place a sophisticated technical assistance and quality control through an own customer support online platform. More than 2 million subscribers were receiving these illegal services totalling the profits for the criminal network at an estimated €15 million. The investigation focused on shutting down the servers and disconnecting the IP addresses, and obtaining relevant information to effectively dismantle the criminal group.
Europol adds that it assisted the investigation by facilitating the information exchange and supporting the financial investigation. During the action day, a Virtual Command Post was set-up at Europol to facilitate the operational coordination and the real-time information exchange and operational analysis against Europol’s databases.
It concludes by saying that this is the first example of the synergies created by the merger of different teams comprised of economic and financial experts under the new European Financial and Economic Crime Centre recently created at Europol.
Europol’s IPC3 (Intellectual Property Crime Coordinated Coalition) which supported the investigation is a project co-funded by the EUIPO to combat Intellectual Property Crime.