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Operation Soteria

New rapid response units launched to tackle youth crime across NSW

Mar 19, 2025

A high-level youth strategy that includes 60 new dedicated police officers and rapid response units was announced today to tackle juvenile crime across New South Wales.

The new unit of up to 60 dedicated police will target regional hotspots including Moree, Tamworth, Dubbo, Orange, Tweed Heads, Coffs Harbour, Kempsey, Taree, and Newcastle over the next three months.

NSW Police Deputy Commissioner Paul Pisanos launched Operation Soteria to address an escalation of violence in offenders aged between 11 to 16 years of age, across western and northern parts of New South Wales.

Operation Soteria will focus on aggravated break, enter and steal offences, stealing motor vehicles and ‘post-and-boast’ offences where kids use social media to gain notoriety for their crimes.

Mr Pisanos said there will also be a strong focus on diverting young offenders away from criminal behaviour.

“The operational arm of this operation will consist of high-visibility policing, targeting a defined cohort of hundreds of repeat offenders believed to be responsible for 90% of youth crime across regional NSW,” he said.

“This is about working to prevent, disrupt and respond to serious violent youth crime and reduce fear in the community.

An extra 20 officers will supplement the unit in the form of surge operations each week, to bolster operational numbers to 80.

Polair and roaming response units will complement high visibility operations.

“This is about sending a clear message to these young criminals that we are going to find you and lock you up,” Mr Pisanos said.

Police Commissioner Karen Webb.

Police Commissioner Karen Webb said the fear of crime in rural communities is having a significant impact.

“It’s also about reducing fear in the community, nobody deserves to be frightened in their own home and in regional NSW that has been the case, it has to stop,” she said.

Under Operation Soteria, which means ‘safety’ command hubs will be established in each region, investigators will use real time intelligence to identify ‘post-and-boast’ social media trends, and those on the periphery of offending will be diverted to youth support services.

As part of the prevention arm of Operation Soteria, police will aim to identify and refer young offenders into programs such as Youth Action Meetings, a multi-agency forum designed to help at risk young people from re-offending.

Other youth programs through the NSW Police Crime Prevention and Youth Command will also be utilised.

“Part of this mission is to lock up the ring leaders and divert others away from a life of crime,” Mr Pisanos said.

“The prevention arm of this operation is extremely important as we want to funnel young kids on the fringe of this criminal activity into suitable programs and away from criminal activity.”

Operation Soteria will be responsible for a statewide coordinated response to youth crime and will take overall command and control of criminal investigations into offending across northern and western New South Wales police regions.

Soteria will oversee Operation Regional Mongoose, which was established in September 2023 and has been arresting, on average, 13 young offenders every week.

Crisis meetings with social media platforms, and the E-Safety Commissioner will also be called to shut down the novelty of posting criminal activity.

“To be clear, posting and boasting criminal activity will not give young offenders notoriety it will land them in custody,” Mr Pisanos said.

Since new ‘post-and-boast’ legislation came into effect 12 months ago, 53 individuals have been charged.

Of those, 27 were under the age of 16.

Operation Soteria will also work with community leaders to provide regular updates on progress to engage with victims of crime in impacted areas.

Police Media

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