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Robodogs, digital forensics and ghost guns: inside Interpol's innovation lab

Robodogs, digital forensics and ghost guns: inside Interpol's innovation lab

Irish Times22-05-2025
A fleet of underwater drones, gleaming and ready for action, is lined up along the wall. Nearby, a small armoury of brightly coloured, 3D-printed guns is displayed on a side table. A robot dog, named Inno, lies prone on the floor, waiting to be activated.
In the leafy Singapore suburb of Tanglin, over the road from the British high commission and the US embassy, and a block away from the botanic gardens,
Interpol
's innovation centre is where law enforcement officers from around the world come to analyse the latest strategies of organised criminals and develop techniques for bringing them down.
One side of a global arms race is being waged here, as the international police organisation tries to stay ahead of its increasingly sophisticated and professionalised criminal adversaries.
For a decade this modest research facility, kitted out with technology at the forefront of policing, has been a mecca for forensic scientists. The centre is set within Interpol's large, fortified complex in Singapore, its second biggest office behind its headquarters in Lyon, France.
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The site also includes one of Interpol's three global command and co-ordination centres which, along with facilities in Lyon and Buenos Aires, provide 24-hour monitoring for police in nearly 200 countries. If a suspect on Interpol's most-wanted list crosses an international border, they will be flagged here. In 2024, 215 fugitives were caught this way. This year, Mohamed Amra, the gangster known as 'The Fly', who was named France's public enemy number one after
his escape
from custody left two prison guards dead last May, was arrested in Romania following an operation involving an international network of police.
The Singapore office is where Interpol studies a range of modern criminal activities, including cyber crime, digital piracy and counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
As in many industries, the business of crime has been profoundly affected by developments in
artificial intelligence
, upending the cat-and-mouse game played by the police and criminals. 'The changes in criminality we have seen over the last two to three years because of advances in technology are bigger than at any point in my career,' says Fabio Bruno, a bespectacled Italian, who started as a fraud investigator in the late 1990s and now runs Interpol's digital forensics team.
Bruno and his colleagues – Paulo Noronha, a Brazilian, and Abdulla al-Jalahma, from Bahrain – take me on a tour of the digital forensics lab. Here the team uses an array of gadgets, from chip readers to smartwatch testing tools, to disassemble digital devices before extracting and analysing their precious data.
Near the door sits a bulky suitcase, heavily padded with a dozen or so cartridges that resemble retro video games. These are readers for the infotainment systems of a variety of car models. Each cartridge can be hooked up to the mini computer that sits inside most modern cars and stores huge amounts of data on their movements. Vehicle digital forensics is one of the fastest-growing areas of criminal investigation.
'Sometimes if the suspect connects their phone to their car entertainment system, we can even access their messages and call history,' says Noronha with a mischievous grin.
The mobile phone has become arguably the most important piece of evidence for criminal investigators. It holds a wealth of information on communication, movement and search history, as well as personal media files. Criminals often try to break or discard their phones when they realise they are about to get caught. But even if the screen or the handset is damaged, the most valuable information is stored in a labyrinth of microchips. Half the Interpol lab is dedicated to workstations for extracting circuitry from broken phones and other devices, using digital microscopes and tiny precision tools.
Around a corner is a portable 'clean room', a glass box with an extractor to purify the air and keep out dust. The chips are highly sensitive to contamination.
Next to it is a thick metal door leading to a windowless office. This is a Faraday room, Jalahma explains, which blocks electromagnetic signals. It is here that investigators take phones that are off or dead and turn them back on for inspection.
'It is like an underground bunker,' says Jalahma. 'If you turn a phone on and it connects to a network, there is always the risk that someone will be able to connect to it and wipe it remotely. We cannot take that risk.'
A logo at Interpol's Global Complex for Innovation building in Singapore, which aims to strengthen global efforts to fight increasingly tech-savvy international criminals. Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP via Getty Images
The lab also features a range of 3D laser scanners: special cameras that capture a 360-degree impression of a crime scene. Set atop a 6ft tripod, the tall black dome head resembles a sleeker version of a surveying tool common on most building sites. During a 20-second rotation, its multiple sensors and cameras can map out a high-definition 3D image, limiting the chances of contamination.
'You can have fewer people walking around, adding their own footprints and potentially accidentally tampering with evidence,' says Bruno. Investigators can revisit the scene remotely with more accurate measurements of bullet trajectories or bloodstain patterns than by traditional methods. The virtual crime scene provides juries with a more immersive way to assess evidence.
The International Criminal Police Commission, as it was known, was founded in 1923 as a group of police forces from 20 countries. Interpol today counts 196 countries as members, a global organisation that unites the US, China, Russia, Ukraine and Iran. Just a handful of countries are not members, including North Korea, Kosovo and Taiwan.
More than 10,000 of Interpol's famous red notices – international alerts for wanted individuals – are issued every year. The first was for a Russian man accused of killing a police officer in 1947. Since then, Interpol has launched a rainbow of different notices: yellow for missing persons, black for unidentified bodies, silver for criminal assets.
Interpol encourages members to share investigative techniques, and it hosts centralised criminal record systems. One of its first priorities was cracking down on counterfeit currency, cheques and passports. It was through Interpol that fingerprint identification techniques, developed by Danish police, spread globally.
The organisation now hosts 19 separate databases, centralising more than 225 million police records on areas as diverse as travel and identity documents, firearms and stolen property. One tracks lost artwork, containing descriptions of cultural objects stolen from museums or looted from war zones such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. Another logs incidents of maritime piracy. In total the databases were searched some 7.4 billion times in 2023.
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Interpol being misused by China to target dissidents and others, ICIJ investigation finds
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Sharing information between police forces is a key part of Interpol's mission. At the Singapore complex, a dedicated team of cyber crime experts from police forces around the world work together to assess emerging cyber threats and alert countries that are under attack. Working at desks in rows and facing a screen showing live data on cyber attacks, the team gathers and analyses information on one of the fastest-moving areas of organised crime.
The Singapore office was opened in 2015 to act as a global hub for tackling the emerging threat of cyber crime. As AI-enabled crime has risen to prominence, the team is now focused on deepfake romance scams, sextortion and multimillion-dollar phishing attacks.
'AI has completely changed the criminal's business model,' says Huanzhang Fu, a former policeman from China who leads the AI lab.
A decade ago, a widely attempted fraud was the 'Nigerian prince' scam, wherein a victim is emailed by supposed foreign royalty, with the promise of shared riches if they provide an upfront payment. Today's AI-enabled scams are far more sophisticated.
Large language models strip out telltale signs of a scam, such as spelling mistakes or syntax errors. Meanwhile, deepfake audio and video are used to provide 'proof' of the scammer's credentials. Southeast Asia is the global centre for romance-baiting scams, where fraudsters strike up phoney relationships with victims, convincing them to hand over ever-greater sums.
The day I visit, the cyber centre is monitoring close to 3.5 million attempted attacks – a fairly typical day, I'm told, with education institutions, telecommunication companies and government agencies the hardest hit.
The screens being analysed by the cyber specialists, on secondment from countries as diverse as Ukraine and Sri Lanka, show a particularly effective malware attack emanating from eastern Europe and targeting countries across north Africa and Asia.
Advances in AI have brought about a new age in the global arms race between police and criminals – one that Interpol is battling to stay ahead of.
[
https://www.irishtimes.com/podcasts/in-the-news/can-ai-help-gardai-detect-future-crimes/
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]
Dogs have aided law enforcement since at least the Middle Ages. The word 'sleuth' is derived from bloodhounds in 14th-century Scotland, known as 'slough dogs' for their ability to track miscreants through boggy ground.
The latest iteration of the police dog is the robotic K9, used to assess potentially dangerous scenes before entering. These robodogs, metallic and faceless with spindly legs, are packed with sensors to detect the presence of a range of hazards, from drugs and explosives to chemicals and radiation.
Interpol's Chinese-made model is roughly the size of a German shepherd. It lies dormant during my visit, but I'm told it can run at up to 12km an hour and jump more than a metre high. The dogs' ability to climb stairs, carry phones or medical supplies, and send and receive audio messages makes them handy in hostage negotiations.
Interpol's battles are also naval. Its collection of remote-controlled, blue submersible drones highlights the way criminals and police often use the same technology, in an escalating battle. Much like the flying drones gangs use to smuggle drugs and mobile phones over prison walls, their underwater cousins are used to transport contraband along rivers and out at sea.
From Brazil, drugs and weapons are transported overseas strapped to the hulls of ships. In this so-called parasite smuggling, cocaine traffickers hire skilled divers to attach torpedo-shaped, waterproof containers to cargo ships bound for European and Asian ports. The ships' crews may have no idea they are part of a global smuggling operation. Interpol's drones monitor for parasites at major ports.
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Ireland is awash with cocaine, but how does it get into the country?
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Another area where police are catching up with criminals is the proliferation of 3D-printed firearms. A type of 'ghost gun', the plastic weapons first appeared just over a decade ago.
The availability of 3D printers and print-to-order services online means criminals are finding it easier to manufacture bespoke firearms. Luigi Mangione, the suspect accused of shooting UnitedHealthcare chief executive Brian Thompson, was in possession of a pistol and silencer that police believe was 3D-printed. More than 27,000 ghost guns were seized by US police in 2023, up from 1,629 in 2017.
Despite their flimsy appearance, each one can sell for as much as $2,000 (€1,750) on the black market.
The replica gun parts on display at Interpol's lab are manufactured here to use in research into ghost guns' traceability. Unlike traditional firearms, which have serial numbers, it seems impossible to track the origin of a ghost gun. Researchers at the lab are working to link ghost guns to their specific printers, analysing distinctive production patterns.
But for every success, the researchers at Interpol are acutely aware that the game of one-upmanship will continue, Bruno says forlornly. 'They are clearly learning from us just like we are studying them.' – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025
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‘I thought the rebels were going to kill me. Then I saw my younger brother was among them'
‘I thought the rebels were going to kill me. Then I saw my younger brother was among them'

Irish Times

timea day ago

  • Irish Times

‘I thought the rebels were going to kill me. Then I saw my younger brother was among them'

The soldier was hungry and strung out on meth. Rebel fighters were attacking his base, just as a military helicopter had dropped food and ammunition for his battalion. After one package landed outside the garrison walls, he was ordered to go retrieve it. However, the rebels got there first and seized the soldier, Cpl Thein Htay Aung of the Myanmar army, and four others with him, along with rice, instant noodles, cigarettes and bullets. Their hands tied, the prisoners were marched to the rebel camp. The corporal expected the worst. Instead, he was shocked to see his little brother standing among the rebels. 'I thought they were going to kill me right there on the road,' Thein (38) said after his capture in February. 'But when I saw my younger brother, I felt a huge sense of relief. I suddenly felt so happy, because I wasn't going to die after all.' READ MORE In a video of the brothers taken that day, the corporal's hands are still tied, and he appears dazed by his sudden change in circumstances. His brother, Ko Tike Moung (30), a rebel fighter, drapes his arm over him and beams with joy. He does the talking. 'Meeting like this makes me happy but also sad,' he said. 'Still, it's fortunate that we're both alive and we can talk to each other like this.' For more than four years, a brutal civil war has consumed Myanmar, killing tens of thousands of people and displacing millions. The conflict, set off by a military coup, has torn apart many families with combatants on both sides. But it is rare for brothers to come face to face amid the fighting. Thein was captured by the Danu People's Liberation Army. Its founder and commander, Tun Tun Naing, recognised the panic on the corporal's face as he reached the rebel camp. 'Our soldier's brother was shaking with fear, worried that we might harm him,' he said. 'This is because in their army, prisoners of war are usually executed, so they assume we will do the same. But we don't treat prisoners of war that way.' Despite lacking a central command, resistance forces have seized large stretches of territory, overrun numerous military bases and taken tens of thousands of junta prisoners. They say they treat captives humanely, as laid out by the Geneva conventions. Though there have been reports of rebels executing POWs, defectors from the military say the junta does so far more commonly. Myanmar soldiers take part in a parade to mark the country's Armed Forces Day. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Forced to Enlist Thein, the third of six children and the older of two boys, never wanted to be a soldier. His father died when he was young. His mother made a living selling fruits and vegetables in the town of Budalin in central Myanmar. Thein left school after the fourth grade. His brother, Tike, the youngest sibling, made it through the eighth grade. When Thein was 18, he stayed out late one night. Soldiers grabbed him off the street, threw him into a truck and drove him to a military camp 80 miles away. There, they forced him to enlist. He deserted twice, he said, but was recaptured both times, spending a total of a year in prison, where he was beaten and kicked as punishment. He was frequently ordered into combat against armed ethnic groups the military has long fought and kept looking for a chance to surrender without being killed. [ In war-torn nations, Trump's travel ban brings a new hardship Opens in new window ] Trained to fire artillery, he was transferred to a base in Shan state in the territory of the Danu people, one of Myanmar's smallest ethnic groups. On top of his combat duties, he was given the smelly job of tending to the pigs his unit raised for food. Ultimately, he spent 20 years – his entire adult life – in the army. 'I was never happy in the military,' he said by phone from the prison camp where he has been held since his capture. State soldiers and police in Rakhine state, Myanmar. Photograph: Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty When Thein was first taken by the military, his mother, Shwe Mi, and siblings searched for him. Three years passed before they received a letter from him saying he had been forcibly conscripted and was stationed at a base in the town of Naung Cho. A few years later, his mother and the two youngest siblings moved there to be close to him. Tike was about 15. Thein started sending them money every month. Then in 2021, the military, which has ruled Myanmar for most of its postcolonial history, seized power back from a newly elected civilian government that had won in a landslide. News of the February 2021 military coup in Myanmar newspapers. Photograph: Aung Kyaw Htet/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Millions took to the streets in protest , and millions more joined a nationwide civil disobedience movement that crippled government institutions and disrupted the economy. Tike joined the protests and begged his brother to desert the army and join, too. Their mother also urged him to switch sides. But Thein refused. The brothers didn't speak again. The monthly payments stopped. After the military crushed peaceful demonstrations by killing hundreds of protesters, many opponents of the regime fled to the countryside and joined armed groups. Clashes between junta troops and rebel forces erupted in many parts of the country, including Shan state. Anti-coup protesters flee from military forces during a demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar, in 2021. Photograph: AP Tike, his mother and youngest sister fled from village to village to escape the fighting. In 2022, he enlisted in the newly formed Danu People's Liberation Army, one of about 500 rebel groups fighting to overthrow the regime. Before Tike left home, his mother told him, 'If you ever meet your brother in battle, do what you must.' High on meth In Naung Cho, not far from the Danu rebels' camp, Thein was stationed at Artillery Command Headquarters 902. Since September, the base has largely been cut off by resistance forces, making delivery of supplies by road risky. Military helicopters airdrop food and ammunition, but supplies often land outside the base, creating opportunities for the rebels. [ In Myanmar, accounts of disappearances create climate of fear Opens in new window ] The rebels got one such opening in early February. They were attacking the garrison when Thein and four other soldiers were sent to retrieve the parcel just outside the garrison's wall. Not realising how near the rebel fighters were, the soldiers ventured out without weapons and were seized by Danu guerrillas. That day, Thein said, he was high on meth, as he was most of his time in the army. Meth was plentiful in the military, he said. Senior officers regularly sold soldiers meth tablets, known as yaba ('crazy medicine' in Thai), or 'WY' after the lettering on the pills. Before a battle, officers would hand them out free. It helped turn the soldiers into ruthless killing machines. 'When we use yaba, we lose our sense of awareness and just follow orders without question,' Thein said. 'Even when people were dying right in front of me in battle, I didn't feel fear. I just pushed forward over the dead bodies and kept fighting. Looking back now, it's terrifying. It's clear that I wasn't in a normal mental state.' 'How Is Mother?' Tike didn't know that his brother had been captured until the prisoners were brought into camp. 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He is housed in a brick building and required to work about three hours a day tending aubergines, mustard greens, roselle and cabbage. The prisoners take turns cooking for themselves. 'Here, they feed us properly, just like they eat, so I'm eating well now,' he said. 'In the army, there were days when we only ate if the officers had leftovers. Sometimes we didn't eat at all.' His 72-year-old mother has come to visit twice, and the camp doctor has been helping him overcome his meth addiction. 'I no longer use meth, but I'm experiencing extreme fatigue, sleep disturbances and anxiety,' Thein said. 'The worst part is feeling emotionally flat and being unable to sleep.' Many of his former comrades in the army want to surrender, he said. They fear death, even though the military trains soldiers to believe that dying in battle is noble. 'My wish to surrender has come true,' Thein said. 'I never wanted to be a soldier. I feel ashamed of ever having been one.' – This article originally appeared in The New York Times . 2025 The New York Times Company

Man shot dead after firing at US border patrol station in Texas
Man shot dead after firing at US border patrol station in Texas

Irish Times

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Man shot dead after firing at US border patrol station in Texas

A 27-year-old Michigan man was shot dead by police after opening fire with an assault rifle on a US border patrol station in the southern Texas city of McAllen on Monday, local police said. Ryan Louis Mosqueda attacked the facility shortly after 6am local time and US border patrol agents returned fire, McAllen police chief Victor Rodriguez told reporters. A McAllen police officer was shot in the knee during the exchange of fire and taken to hospital, Mr Rodriguez said. The US Department of Homeland Security said a border patrol employee was also injured. Law enforcement found additional firearms and more ammunition in Mr Mosqueda's vehicle, Rodriguez added. 'There were many, many, dozens of rounds fired by the suspect towards the building and agents in the building,' he said. Writing was spray-painted on the side of the vehicle but Mr Rodriguez did not provide details of what it said or whether it gave any indication of the motive for the attack. Mr Mosqueda is believed to have ties to the area as he was reported missing from a residence in Weslaco, about 29km east of McAllen, Mr Rodriguez said, without giving further details. The FBI is leading the investigation as it involved an attack on federal officers and a federal building, Mr Rodriguez said. Flights at the nearby McAllen International Airport were delayed for several hours as police secured the area. US president Donald Trump has made combating illegal immigration a top priority, sending troops to secure the US-Mexico border and launching aggressive raids in US cities. The actions - supported by Mr Trump's hardline Republican base - have also led to pushback from Americans concerned about arrests of non-criminals and enforcement tactics that include officers wearing masks to hide their identities. The number of migrants caught crossing the border illegally has fallen to record lows under Mr Trump, including a new monthly low of about 6,100 in June. (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2025

Iran, Hezbollah, and the Kinahans in league to bring tonnes of cocaine through Ireland
Iran, Hezbollah, and the Kinahans in league to bring tonnes of cocaine through Ireland

Irish Examiner

time06-07-2025

  • Irish Examiner

Iran, Hezbollah, and the Kinahans in league to bring tonnes of cocaine through Ireland

Iran and the Lebanese terrorist group it funds, Hezbollah, worked with the Kinahan cartel in a foiled plot to traffic more than 2.2 tonnes of cocaine through Irish waters, authorities believe. Direct links between Hezbollah and the two Iranians sentenced on Friday for their involvement in a drug trafficking operation on the MV Matthew, the interception of which led to the biggest seizure of cocaine in the history of the State, are also suspected. Saied Hassani, 39, a third officer with significant sea faring experience and the former captain of the MV Matthew, Soheil Jelveh, 51, are believed to have direct links to the terror group Hezbollah. The voice directing operations on the MV Matthew remotely from Dubai, known in Signal and WhatsApp groups used by the crew as 'Captain Noah', named in court as Mehdi Bordbar, who is believed to be a UAE resident, is also believed to have direct links to Hezbollah. Mehdi Bordbar is believed to be alive in the Middle East and international investigations are now underway into his potential involvement in transnational organized crime. Venezuela, the South American country which the MV Matthew set sail from and off the coast of which its cocaine cargo was loaded by armed men at night, is also believed to have strong links to Iran, with its anti-US and anti-West ideology, and Hezbollah, the militant group it funds. Dave Caunter, Director of organized and emerging crime Interpol, Captain Darragh Kirwan, Head of Neval services Operations Command, Angela Willis, Assistant Commissioner organized and serious crime, Ruth Kennedy, Revenue and Sjoerd Top, Executive Director Maritime Analysis and Operation Centre – Narcotics (MAOC (N). Picture: Dan Linehan Gardaí are also now investigating the two 'persons of interest' identified by gardaí as travelling to Castletownbere in West Cork and buying the Castlemore shipping vessel for some €300,0000, the money sent to Ireland from Dubai. When this fishing boat ran aground off the Wexford coast in September 2023, it precipitated the collapse of the major drug trafficking operation. The Castlemore was to collect cocaine from the MV Matthew off the Irish coast in September 2023. But its wifi malfunctioned, its engine failed, and it ran aground on a notorious sandbank in stormy seas. Its two crew members were rescued by helicopter before being arrested. On Friday, eight men were sentenced to a combined 129 years in prison for their role in the drug trafficking operation. They are Dutch national Cumali Ozgen, 49, who was said to be the 'eyes and ears' of the cartel on board the MV Matthew and was described in court as a 'malign force'; Iranians Soheil Jelveh, 51, and Saeid Hassani, 39; Filipino Harold Estoesta, 31; Ukrainians Mykhailo Gavryk, and Vitaliy Vlasoi, both 32; and Vitaliy Lapa, aged 62; and UK national Jamie Harbron. Justice Melanie Greally accepted that none of the accused were operating in the higher echelons of the organised crime group which was directing the operation remotely. But they were 'committed to the success of the venture'. And maritime drug trafficking cannot take place without the expertise of experienced seafarers, which most of the men were, Justice Greally said. The Kinahan cartel is believed to be one of multiple organised crime groups involved in the MV Matthew operation. An operation of that scale would involve multiple crime groups and entities, Assistant Commissioner Angela Willis, head of organised and serious crime with An Garda Síochána, said. The financing of the operation is being investigated transnationally, she said, but it was 'reasonable to assume' that the Kinahan organized crime group was involved. Now that eight men have been sentenced for their involvement, the next phase of the investigation is underway, looking at other people in Ireland and abroad. It will also look at asset recovery for those involved. 'These are transglobal networks, they can interchange between each other. 'So we're looking at a number of transglobal potentials.' Speaking in Haulbowline at a press briefing on the record cocaine seizure after eight men were sentenced to some 129 years in jail for their involvement in the drug smuggling operation, Ast Chief Commissioner Willis said: 'Transnational organised crime groups know no borders. They prey on people's vulnerability for their own financial gain. People are dispensable and expendable when no longer of use to the criminal organization. Life is cheap and protecting their core criminal interests, which is money, is their key priority. To any person who consumes illegal, controlled drugs in a recreational setting, you are the ones funding these criminal organisations, you are directly linked to the misery and the suffering criminal organisations inflict on our communities. 'An Garda Síochána along with our national and international partners will never waiver in our determination to disrupt, degrade and dismantle these criminal organisations, with the ultimate aim to bring those responsible for addiction and death to justice.' Representatives from the Joint Task Force that intercepted the MV Matthew and uncovered the largest cocaine seizure in the history of the State, were at Haulbowline naval base in Cork today, with gardaí, the navy and revenue commissioners present. Representatives from Interpol and the maritime drug dismantling body MAOC-N also attended.

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