Asked by Lord Scriven To ask Her Majesty’s
Government whether the storage of the 19 million facial images
uploaded onto the police national database is compliant with data
protection legislation. The Minister of State, Home Office
(Baroness Williams of Trafford) (Con) My Lords,...Request free trial
Asked by
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The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, legislation gives police the power to take and
store facial images from arrested persons. There has been
no successful legal challenge to the retention of images on
the PND on data protection grounds, but the Government
acknowledge that there are privacy issues. The custody
images review has now been published and makes
recommendations for improvements to the retention regime.
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(LD)
I thank the Minister for that Answer. She will know that
the review published last week into the 19 million images
held on the police national database was in response to a
High Court case of 2012 that found that treating the images
of convicted and non-convicted individuals the same was
unlawful. How do the new rules in the review make it lawful
when it states that the images both of convicted and
non-convicted individuals can be stored and used on the
police national database for 10 years?
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My Lords, there is a presumption of deletion in certain
categories—certainly for the under-18s, for those not
convicted, as the noble Lord said, and for people who have
been convicted of a non-recordable offence. These can all
request that their images be deleted, but there are
exceptions which I think are reasonable—if there is a
substantive reason to believe that someone is linked to
terrorism, if they are dangerous or if they are linked to
organised crime. Otherwise, there is now an arrangement
whereby people can request deletion.
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(Con)
My Lords, I am surprised that there are so few photographic
records available to the police. I should have thought that
there was a good case for all passport photographs to be
available to the police. Does my noble friend agree that
given a conflict between fighting serious crime,
particularly terrorism, and privacy, the British people
would almost certainly regard the former as having
priority?
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My noble friend talks about privacy. If everybody was
required to put their passport photographs towards a
national database there might be a real issue with privacy.
What the Government are trying to do, and my noble friend
alluded to it, is to have images on record of people
previously convicted of a crime. The custody image review
is attempting to get rid of the facial images of those who
are not convicted—and I include myself in that. If you have
a passport but have not been convicted, I am not sure what
benefit your photograph could be to the police national
database.
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(Non-Afl)
Is this not a matter of balance? Does the Minister agree
that the keeping of an innocent person’s image on a
database is of far less consequence than being the innocent
victim of a violent crime?
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The noble Lord is absolutely right: it is a question of
balance. It is a balance between enabling the police to do
their job and to have a good database of criminals and
those who have been convicted but also, as he says, if you
are an innocent person, of not having your face on the
database.
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(LD)
My Lords, can the Minister explain why the police are
apparently not going to identify and remove the photographs
of innocent people that are currently on the database? If
there is a name and a date of birth connected with each
photograph, why cannot that be run against the police
national computer? If the Government are saying that the
police can develop a national identification database, why
do they not say so? At least the is being honest that
that is what it wants. Why cannot the Government?
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I am not sure I entirely get the tenor of the noble Lord’s
question. If you are not convicted of an offence and your
image is on the database you can request that it be—
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From now on.
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From now on; the noble Lord is absolutely right. However,
if your face is currently on the database, you can say, “It
has been on there for 10 years and please will you remove
it?”.
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(Lab)
As has been said, the review has just been announced by the
Government in a Written Statement of 24 February.
Interestingly enough, the Statement managed to make no
reference to the fact that the review arose from a judgment
against the Government in 2012—which begs the question of
why that was not included in the Statement—and we will have
to wait to see whether the arrangements now proposed will
lead to another legal challenge. Since the recommendation
for a review, which is being adopted, is that “unconvicted
persons” can,
“apply for deletion of their custody image”—
that is, they have to take the initiative to apply, which
is the point that the noble Lord, , is making, but I do not
wish to repeat the question that he asked—what steps will
the Government take to ensure that widespread publicity is
given to the fact that millions of unconvicted peopled can
now apply for deletion of their custody image? What form
will the Government’s advertising and publicity campaign
take, since the 2012 judgment was in a case against the
Secretary of State? How much money do the Government intend
to spend on their advertising and publicity campaign to
advise millions of people of their right in respect of
deletion of their record?
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The noble Lord is absolutely right that the Government
recognised that the 2012 judgment said it was contrary to
Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, and
that has now been addressed through the custody images
review. I assume that there will be something on GOV.UK
about publicity regarding innocent people whose faces are
still on the database, but I will get back to the noble
Lord on the precise steps that we will take.
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(CB)
Can the Minister say whether, beyond the UK data protection
and legislative issues, the Americans, through their Patriot
Act, have any form of access to the police national database?
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Generally, the presumption is that anyone concerned with
crime, and fighting crime, will have access to the PND. As to
which countries will have that access, clearly there are
international arrangements for the sharing of data, and I am
sure that that includes America.
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(GP)
My Lords, I still do not understand how an innocent member of
the public will know that their image is on the database.
Surely it would be easier for the police just to delete those
innocent people without putting them to the trouble of
applying. It would be more work for the police that way.
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The noble Baroness has a point, but in fact it is a manual
process and would be incredibly resource-intensive. There
will be people who do not mind their image being there. If my
image were on the PND, although I do not think that it
is—[Interruption.] If noble Baroness’s is, I would expect her
to request deletion immediately.
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