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Police 'wrong' to pass on allegation

Posted: 29 January 2004 | Subscribe Online


A High Court judge has ruled that West Midlands police was wrong to tell the Criminal Records Bureau about allegations of indecent exposure against a social worker.

The allegations, made in 2002, were later dropped when a witness failed to identify the social worker in an identity parade. The judge ruled that the man was entitled to say he had been wrongly identified and charged.

A West Midlands police spokesperson said that the force believed it was right to disclose the information and would be appealing against the ruling.
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"We are being challenged for disclosing information on this occasion, but in the past the police service has been criticised for not disclosing in similar circumstances," she said.

West Midlands chief constable's counsel said that the judge's ruling on consultation would increase the "difficulties" faced by police making disclosure decisions.

The social worker said he was sacked from his job when his employer learned that he had been charged. His counsel told the court that all of his subsequent attempts to get a job in social work had been thwarted by the disclosure.
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The assistant information commissioner David Smith said that the police had to make decisions about what information to disclose but that they "may not be the best placed to do that" because they may not have much knowledge about the job concerned.

The case adds to the confusion over data-sharing highlighted by Humberside police's deletion of allegations against Ian Huntley.


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