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‘Corrupt’ cop jailed for tipping off pal to EncroChat dragnet

A British court has sentenced a “corrupt” cop to almost four years behind bars for tipping off a friend that officers had compromised the EncroChat encrypted messaging app network.

Natalie Mottram, 25, of Warrington, England, was sent down for three years and nine months on Friday at Liverpool Crown Court. She previously worked for Cheshire Police, most recently as an intelligence analyst for the North West Regional Organised Crime Unit. She was arrested by the UK National Crime Agency (NCA) on June 12, 2020.

In August this year, Mottram pleaded guilty to misconduct in public office, perverting the course of justice, and unauthorized access to computer material.

natalie_mottram_mugshot

Bent … Natalie Mottram’s mugshot. Source: Crown Prosecution Service

Mottran was collared as part of Operation Venetic, the NCA’s codename for the EncroChat takedown. According to the cops, their secret infiltration of the supposedly impregnable chat app, allowing officers to silently read crooks’ private messages and probe criminal dealings, has led to action against many of its more than 60,000 users.

There is no place for corrupt officers in UK law enforcement and it was vital that this investigation uncovered her betrayal

“Operation Venetic is a once in a generation investigation which has made a huge contribution to public protection,” said John McKeon, head of the NCA’s anti-corruption unit, in a statement. “There is no place for corrupt officers in UK law enforcement and it was vital that this investigation uncovered her betrayal.”

In 2020, police in France and the Netherlands led the effort to compromise the communications service. Once they’d busted into the network’s servers, cops used that access to collect conversations and other data from EncroChat handsets and use this information to make arrests, with the NCA doing the legwork in the UK.

To date, British law enforcement has arrested 3,147 suspects and convicted 1,240 of those based on intel harvested from EncroChat, according to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).

The operation also led to lawsuits arguing the dragnet surveillance of the chat network violated European and UK laws, and that evidence wasn’t obtained legally.

We’ve got a leak

Soon after British police got in on the EncroChat spying action, they realized they had a security problem of their own.

According to the NCA, Mottram told Jonathan Kay, 39, the police were monitoring people’s encrypted EncroChat conversations, and tipped him off that the cops had intel on him presumably from his use of the app.

Then in April 2020, according to the plod, a friend of Kay’s pinged another EncroChat user to warn them that the app was under surveillance. Kay’s friend also, we’re told, tipped off a second contact, messaging:

“Burns” refers to the delete-time on messages. The friend continued:

In June 2020, investigators suspected Mottram has been alerting people to the covert monitoring of EncroChat, so they placed her under surveillance and asked her to analyze intelligence that mentioned Kay, who was also the boyfriend of Mottram’s friend, Leah Bennett, 38. Crucially, the intel had been fabricated by officers to snare Mottram.

The NCA said Mottram, Kay, and Bennett “had grown close a few years before over a shared love of exercise.” 

We’re told Mottram drove to Kay and Bennett’s house to warn them about the police file on Kay – which as we know, and she didn’t, was deliberately bogus. Mottram, Kay, Bennett, and another were all later arrested that month.

Additionally, the plod seized £200,000 in cash from Kay and Bennett’s house.

Kay, who earlier admitted perverting the course of justice, was jailed for 30 months on Friday. A similar charge was dropped against Bennett.

In addition to warning her friends that they were about to be scooped up in the EncroChat surveillance, evidence presented by the prosecution at trial showed Mottram bought weed from a dealer whose phone number was saved in her mobile phone. She also told Bennett about a murder file she had seen on her boss’s desk, and took selfies with her work computer visible and showing an “official sensitive” document. ®

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