Police number plate camera scheme broke law in Royston
By Tom Espiner for BBC News
24 July 2013
A police force must stop using number plate recognition
technology after a warning from the UK's data watchdog. The Information
Commissioner's Office said Hertfordshire Constabulary's use of cameras in and
around the town of Royston was in breach of the law. It said the force had
failed to carry out required privacy impact checks. The ICO's ruling may have
wider significance for the gathering of number plate data in the UK. "It
is difficult to see why a small, rural town such as Royston requires cameras monitoring
all traffic in and out of the town 24 hours a day," said Stephen Eckersley,
the ICO's head of enforcement. "The use of ANPR [automatic number plate
recognition] cameras and other forms of surveillance must be proportionate to
the problem it is trying to address. "After detailed inquiries, including
consideration of the information Hertfordshire Constabulary provided, we found
that this simply wasn't the case in Royston."
The ICO added that the use of seven cameras had made it
impossible for motorists to drive into the town without a record being kept of
their journey. It noted the scheme had become known locally as "the ring
of steel". The police force has now been told it must take the equipment
down unless it can justify its use. Hertfordshire Constabulary said it would
not appeal the ruling. "The constabulary intends to continue using ANPR
cameras, which deliver very substantial policing benefits, but also to ensure that
its particular deployment of such cameras is - and is seen to be - fully
justified," it said. "We look forward to working with the commissioner
to achieve those objectives." The force added that it had carried out its
own evaluation of why it had used the tech, but accepted it needed to do
additional privacy checks.
The data regulator began investigating the use of number
plate recognition in the town after a complaint in June 2011 by three civil
liberties groups: No CCTV, Big Brother Watch and Privacy International. "Royston
police decided to track everyone without any clear reason," said Privacy
International executive director Gus Hosein. "Just because a technology
enables mass surveillance, that doesn't mean that it is right to do so."
Number plate recognition is used by police forces around the
world as a crime-fighting tool. Earlier this week the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) highlighted its concerns about the "widespread collection"
of vehicle data by US police. Number plate surveillance could have a
"chilling effect" on the way US citizens associate with each other
and even discourage some people from meeting up, the civil liberties group said
on Tuesday.
[A small victory for the good guys it would seem but so many
battles have already been lost and so many others are yet to be fought…… Of
course if you’ve done nothing wrong then you have nothing to fear. Yeah, right!]
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