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Personal details of 84,000 prison inmates lost in security blunder

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Published Date: 22 August 2008
THE personal details of the entire prison population south of the Border have been lost in a massive security breach at the Home Office, it was revealed last night.
Information on tens of thousands of criminals – including expected release dates – was lost while private contractors hired by the government were transferring files between computers.

The blunder could lead to gang warfare and leave the taxpayer liable for compensation pay-outs to every prisoner in England and Wales, it was warned last night.

Critics of the proposed identity cards said the blunder was evidence that the government could not be trusted to run the scheme.

The information had been encrypted, but was decoded and placed on a memory stick, which has since vanished. The names, birthdays and expected release dates of 84,000 prisoners – the entire prison population of England and Wales – were on the memory stick.

Names, addresses and dates of birth of 33,000 criminals who had committed at least six serious crimes in the last year were included, as well as details of 10,000 "priority" criminals. There were also the initials of people on drug treatment programmes.

The data was lost by management consultants PA Consultants, who told the Home Office on Monday about the blunder. Ministers were alerted on Tuesday after a search of offices failed to find it.

Officers from Scotland Yard's Specialist and Economic Crimes Unit have been brought in to establish what has happened to the stick. But a spokesman from the Metropolitan Police revealed that they were only asked for help by the company yesterday. And he hinted that the stick had been mislaid by an individual.

The spokesman said: "Officers are currently meeting with PA Consulting to review the circumstances of the loss by their member of staff. There is no (criminal] investigation at this stage."

The Information Commissioner was alerted to the breach last night and has launched an independent investigation.

Last night, Dominic Grieve, the shadow home secretary, described the loss as a "massive failure of duty". Pointing to previous data-loss scandals, he said: "What is more scandalous is it is not the first time the government has been shown to be incapable of protecting the integrity of highly sensitive data, rendering them unfit to be charged with protecting our safety.

"The British taxpayer will be outraged if they are made to pick up the bill for compensation to serious criminals."

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said: "People will start wondering whether ministers are capable of keeping any data safe anywhere in the country.

"If this government can't keep data about criminals safe, why should we trust them with the data of millions of innocent Britons in an ID card database?"

David Smith, deputy commissioner in the Information Commissioner's Office, said the latest loss showed that personal information could be a "toxic liability" if not handled properly. He called for data protection to be taken seriously at all levels and sensitive information to be held securely at all times.

Juliet Lyon, the director of the Prison Reform Trust, said: "People are sent to prison to lose their liberty, not their identity. It seems extraordinary that a private company should be entrusted with, and then lose, so much confidential data."

The data lost this week is part of the JTrack system of managing serious offenders. The system is used by police forces and justice boards to keep tabs on prolific offenders who have left custody.

A Home Office spokesperson confirmed the loss, but refused to say if there would be security implications. They confirmed an investigation had begun.

Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, is likely to face criticism for not publicly commenting on the loss.

The government has been hit by several serious data losses. The biggest involved 25 million records when everyone receiving child benefit had details lost by HM Revenue and Customs last year.

In June, ministers admitted losing secret files on al-Qaeda and Iraq's security forces. The files were left on a train.

In the same month, the theft of Cabinet minister Hazel Blears' laptop from her constituency office was reported.

The full article contains 697 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 August 2008 1:14 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Kipling,

22/08/2008 01:36:37
Compensation ? Who's going to steal the identities of a bunch of cons? As I've written before, regardless of who is keeping the data or who it concerns, personal data should have a price on it and given the security that such a total cost deserves.
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 22/08/2008 02:32:35

Another cause of blame, on the 'Alien Landing'

The Year of MMVIII Everyone has gone 'BONKERS'!

Blame them little creator's that landed while we were all,...

'fast-asleep' for causing this mischievous act!

I have told you all before about this! BUT! 'OH NO' no-one will listen to your 'Uncle Charles'

Soo more fools you!
3

Jock's Away,

Africa, 22/08/2008 06:46:34
Telecommunications: Faster than a Glasgow Steamy, Faster than the paperazzi, Telephone,Telegram and TELL the Government.
Data control is out of control. There is a culture of if it is not theirs personally, what is the value? who cares. In the services not long ago you lost information at your peril. at risk was careers, pension and in some cases personal liberty.(Jail). Now it is farmed out to companies with no means to control their staff other than firing them, with the prospect of another IT automaton around the corner.
This time is is prisoners, who when released will try to get on with their lives.
WHERE IS THE Data Protection Commissar, what is being done to hold people and institution accountable and responsible. Most importantly. As data now dictates if you live or die (really), how or who can you trust. Certainly not the government offices with the data currently. 1984 become a very real senario.
4

yockel,

22/08/2008 07:56:44
Why get upset that data gets lost. Get furious that private contractors are free to copy it. There is no need to lose data in order to sell it.
5

ghost chaser,

The other side of the pond and burning up !!! 22/08/2008 08:24:48
what is going to happen ? surly they have a back up disk or maybe good old fashion paper records. Oh, I would not want to be the person who botched this up. Does anyone know what is going to take to fix this loss.
6

Climate change is a fraud,

22/08/2008 09:29:42
Who's up for one of NuLabour's national IDcards?

Vote UKIP!
7

Climate change is a fraud,

22/08/2008 11:15:20
#11

Man made CC.

Do you really believe that our cars are causing global warming, global cooling and climate change? You are in a minority if you think that man is causing the polar caps of Mars to melt. Do you watch a lot of soaps on TV?

http://www.prisonplanet.com/2008-coolest-for-at-least-five-years.html

2008 Coolest For At Least Five Years

Man-made climate change advocates scramble to explain away failure of global warming to appear as ordered.

UKIP is the only UK party to tell the truth about the EU.
8

hertscot,

22/08/2008 12:04:17
#8, couldn't agree more

#12, the global land and ocen temps have been rising since the begining of the 20th century try the link below, they don't try to explain why, they just present recorded data. climate cahnge is long term change not year on year, it is trend that needs to be analysed not isolated anomalies.

http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/

9

Scottish 'N British,

22/08/2008 12:36:22
HTF could a memory stick vanish? Is this code for 'hole in pocket'?

This comes down to responsibility.

More care would tresult if sackings (without cosy pension rights and pay-offs) were the punishement for these hapless fools.

10

we the people,

22/08/2008 14:45:37
climate change denial + support for ukip = crank
11

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 22/08/2008 15:24:35
If prisoners attempt to seek compensation do we have enough confidence that the government have a clause in the contract about data security and consequential loss from breaches in it?

Anyway I would have sympathy for other groups but not prisoners. What about all the data lost on Child Benefit recipients?
12

Mad Jock,

East Lothian 22/08/2008 15:27:48
I don't suppose that it's possible that the identity of some convicted identity thieves might be stolen by some unconvicted identity thieves? Is it too much to hope for?
13

Joe Macdelta.,

22/08/2008 16:06:52
Any compensation to be paid should come from the insurance of the private contractor who f***ed up and lost the details in the first place, why should the hard pressed tax payer foot the bill for a private company's negligence, and anyway why should convicts get any compensation.
14

S. A. C.,

Edinburgh 22/08/2008 17:12:50
The company that lost it should pay any compensation order, I hope Scotland disnae get dragged into this very south of the border affair. Devo. now
15

Alba Abú,

Heart of Midlothian 22/08/2008 20:07:25
Pity that it was not the scumbag prisoners that were "lost" Whilst you and I have to get out of bed early each morning to earn our bread ,these degenerates are growing fat on 4 meals per day at our expense. Scumbags one and all!
16

Paula,

22/08/2008 21:42:49
Compensation?

So does that mean that those of us who were informed that our details and that of our children had been lost in last years blunder can claim too? Why is it always those who have commited human wrongs are allowed to abuse the human rights system?
17

David Gerard,

London 24/08/2008 23:28:56
It could be worse ... maybe. http://notnews.today.com/?p=36

 

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