UK police organised crime data platform
- July 23, 2025
- William Payne

UK police are working with US tech giant Palantir to develop an advanced policing data platform to tackle serious and organised crime. The platform will provide a unified view of data from multiple sources. It will also automate manual processes, and apply AI for data summarisation and language translation.
The aim is to achiever faster response times and more effective investigations.
As part of a Home Office-funded pilot, the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) contracted Palantir Technologies to test the need for the capabilities provided by its Palantir Foundry advanced data platform.
The English East Midlands region includes a number of major cities, including: Derby, Leicester, Lincoln, Northampton, and Nottingham. The East Midlands Special Operations Unit is tasked with tackling serious crimes that include: drug trafficking, including cross policing districts “County Lines” operations; illegal firearms; human trafficking and modern slavery; organised immigration; money laundering; cyber-enabled crimes; fraud; and CSE.
The pilot, dubbed ‘Project Nectar,’ was initially launched within Bedfordshire Police, and is designed to assess how this type of technology can support and enhance operational policing.
In doing so, policing teams are provided with a single, unified view of data, which has been collated from multiple sources – data that officers and staff would traditionally gather manually.
The platform can then be used to automate time-consuming manual processes, as well as leverage artificial intelligence (AI) to support actions such as data summarisation and language translation.
The pilot will evaluate how this technology could support faster response times, more effective investigations, and more efficient resource allocation.
The pilot is part of a broader national effort to explore the responsible use of technology and AI in public services.
The findings from the pilot are likely to shape future national approaches to the use of data federation platforms, advanced analytics and AI in policing.
Assistant Chief Constable Diane Coulson, of EMSOU, on behalf of the project said: “We are working under strict guidelines to improve how we investigate serious and organised crime, to help keep our communities safe.
“This pilot starts to address the data and resourcing challenges policing is currently facing, with an aim of trying to overcome them.”
Project Nectar is working to enhance the usability of existing, legally accessible information, ensuring compliance with national guidance. It has robust oversight through checks, balances, and independent review.
“It would be remiss of us not to explore the opportunities that this type of technology can bring to policing,” ACC Coulson added. “We are ensuring that every step is taken responsibly, with a real person always in the decision-making loop.
“We will be comparing new data-driven insights and machine learning processes with traditional methods, to understand how we might be more effective in our work and identify potential cost savings.”


