Germany Launches Ambitious Crackdown on Organized Crime with High-Tech Overhaul of Security Agencies

February 25, 2026
Germany Launches Ambitious Crackdown on Organized Crime with High-Tech Overhaul of Security Agencies
  • Germany unveils a comprehensive plan to modernize main security authorities, including customs (Zoll) and the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), to disrupt and dismantle organized crime more effectively.

  • The action plan targets organized crime across financial crime, drug trafficking, and money laundering, with aims to tighten enforcement, boost inter-agency networking, expand personnel, and upgrade technology.

  • The report accompanies a short video segment, running about three minutes, with the timestamp noted at roughly 12:34.

  • A key policy measure reverses evidentiary burdens in cases of gaps between assets and income to facilitate seizure and asset recovery from serious crimes.

  • In 2024, illegal drug trafficking accounted for 40% of organized crime proceedings (259 of 650 cases), with money laundering involved in 146 cases totaling about €230 million.

  • Overall, the initiative aims to curb networks that cost the economy billions, with organized crime causing an estimated €2.64 billion in economic damage in 2024, and drug trafficking representing a large share of cases.

  • The plan represents a joint effort by three ministries, with detailed legal foundations to come in subsequent legislation, centering on enforcement, coordination, and technological capability.

  • Institutional changes include tighter information sharing between Zoll and BKA, purpose-limited data access, and new powers for automated data analysis, biometric internet matching, and IT product testing.

  • Officials, including the Finance Minister and Vice-Chancellor, describe the plan as sharpening the rule of law by targeting criminals at their money sources.

  • Drug trafficking will be addressed through a joint Drug Analysis and Evaluation Center and a joint federal investigative group for drug offenses, co-managed by Zoll and BKA at federal level.

  • The plan provides mutual data access between customs and the BKA, with AI-powered data analysis, new units for money laundering investigations, and interoperable data access to identify suspects across fragmented datasets.

  • Expanded authorities and personnel for the BKA, plus interoperable data sharing and joint data-analysis centers and cross-agency investigation teams focused on money laundering and narcotics operations.

Summary based on 6 sources


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