RFP QuestBeta
ClosedStage · contract

POLICE DIGITAL SERVICE

Asset Recovery IT

IT ServicesCPV 72000000
Value£14.4m
Deadline12 Mar 2025
Published8 Oct 2025
RegionLondon
Timeline
Published 8 Oct 2025ClosedCloses 12 Mar 2025
Contract value in context
£14.4mtotal contract value
median £120k
this tender£0£15.6m

This is a large award for IT Services — above three-quarters of comparable contracts. Based on 36,449 valued IT Services tenders in our corpus.

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The brief

In accordance with the Public Contract Regulations 2015, as amended (Regulations), the Company is seeking to establish a contract through running a Further Competition under CCS Framework RM6259 Vertical Application Solutions for the provision of an Asset Recovery IT (ARIT) service (Contract).

Serious and organised crime is a threat to national security.

Illicit money is the common thread that runs through almost all offending, as criminals use the proceeds of their crime to fund their lifestyle and conduct further crime.

Asset Recovery is the power to locate and seize money made by criminals, with the aim of tackling economic crime.

This ensures criminal networks are denied the ability to hide, move or use illicit money.

Legal powers for tackling economic crime and recovering criminal assets are defined under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (POCA).

Currently the Joint Asset Recovery Database (JARD) is a the system used to record asset recovery cases in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, achieved as a result of executing powers under the Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA) 2002.

JARD is a legacy system and is used as a case management tool and database to store the end-to-end details of cases involving asset recovery and is continually updated throughout the lifecycle of each individual case.

Assets recovered under the Proceeds of Crime Act (2002) need to be accurately recorded in order to be made available to operational agencies.

JARD has become a barrier to progress for the following reasons: a) JARD does not provide a view across multiple systems and suffers from technical constraints and service reliability issues; b) By being a standalone solution, JARD depends on high levels of manual data entry, with associated risks of human error and data inaccuracies, potentially slowing down or frustrating the asset recovery process; c) JARD also suffers from outages caused by its obsolete technology that risks the entire asset recovery process, both national and internationally; and d) JARD does not align to cloud first and other government IT strategic directives, making ongoing operations more difficult and expensive.

JARD's issues, summarised above, are resulting in missed asset recovery opportunities due to a lack of integration with other law enforcement databases.

It is expected that replacing JARD with a new Asset Recovery IT (ARIT) service will significantly increase value for money and present new asset recovery opportunities.

It would enable substantial efficiency savings through automation and integration with other Law Enforcement databases, improved data integrity/validation and reduce ongoing support and service management costs.

Replacing the JARD system with the new Asset Recovery IT (ARIT) service provides opportunity to transform use, increase asset recovery and impact on serious and organised crime activities, while also upgrading the technology in line with current standard.

Key requirements

What the supplier must deliver

01

Assets recovered under the Proceeds of Crime

Assets recovered under the Proceeds of Crime Act (2002) need to be accurately recorded in order to be made available to operational agencies.

02

A) JARD does not provide a view

a) JARD does not provide a view across multiple systems and suffers from technical constraints and service reliability issues;.

03

JARD's issues, summarised above, are resulting in

JARD's issues, summarised above, are resulting in missed asset recovery opportunities due to a lack of integration with other law enforcement databases.

04

It would enable substantial efficiency savings through

It would enable substantial efficiency savings through automation and integration with other Law Enforcement databases, improved data integrity/validation and reduce ongoing support and service management costs.

Derived from the notice text — always confirm against the original documents.

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Source & provenance
OCID
2295ed42-9b6a-4f63-8708-58af1616249a
Stage
contract · Contract
Source
Contracts Finder
Buyer ref
PDSCN-352-2024
View the original notice on Contracts Finder

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source data © Crown copyright.

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