Peadar Tóibín
Question:359. Deputy Peadar Tóibín asked the Minister for Justice the amount of money seized by the Criminal Assets Bureau in each of the past 15 years and to date in 2023. [50575/23]
View answerDáil Éireann Debate, Tuesday - 21 November 2023
359. Deputy Peadar Tóibín asked the Minister for Justice the amount of money seized by the Criminal Assets Bureau in each of the past 15 years and to date in 2023. [50575/23]
View answerAs the Deputy will be aware, the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) is a multi-agency statutory body established under the Criminal Assets Bureau Act 1996.
The Bureau’s remit is to target a person's assets, wherever situated, which derive, or are suspected to derive, directly or indirectly, from criminal conduct.
Since its inception, the Bureau has been at the forefront of fighting organised crime in this jurisdiction and disrupting the activities of criminal gangs by depriving them of ill-gotten assets.
Under the Criminal Assets Bureau Act 1996, the Chief Bureau Officer is responsible for the administration and business of the Criminal Assets Bureau. Under the Act, the Chief Bureau Officer is responsible to the Commissioner of An Garda Síochána for these functions. As Minister for Justice, I have no direct role in these functions.
I am advised by CAB that the table below outlines the monetary value of financial assets (money seized and moneys frozen in financial institutions) seized by the Criminal Assets Bureau for the years 2012 – 2022. The Criminal Assets Bureau did not record monetary value by asset type prior to 2012. The figures for 2023 have not yet been compiled and will be outlined in the CAB Annual Report 2023.
Year |
Cash Seized / Moneys frozen in Financial Institutions |
2008 |
N/A |
2009 |
N/A |
2010 |
N/A |
2011 |
N/A |
2012 |
1,192,520 |
2013 |
1,610,666 |
2014 |
6,219,682 |
2015 |
747,301 |
2016 |
1,603,067 |
2017 |
3,576,661 |
2018 |
6,018,832 |
2019 |
54,650,943.92 |
2020 |
1,430,739 |
2021 |
911,659 |
2022 |
3,218,391 |
The large increase in 2019 is due to the granting of a freezing order over cryptocurrency to the value of €53,023,140.