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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> W v Chief Constable of Northumbria [2009] EWHC 747 (Admin) (07 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/747.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 747 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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W |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHIEF CONSTABLE OF NORTHUMBRIA |
Defendant |
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Nicholas Wilcox instructed by Director of Legal Services Northumbria Police for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23rd March 2009 to 24th March 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nicol:
Introduction
The factual background
"Q. What kind of firm is that, you've said that you are a driver.
A. yeah, I'm a driver delivering to stores.
Q. Delivering to stores?
A. yeah it's like furniture basically where you can't get credit you go in and pick what you want a pay for it (inaudible) percent all of the time.
Q. And you deliver goods to the customers.
A. I deliver to the shops
Q. You deliver to the shops?
A. (inaudible) vans."
I note that in a witness statement prepared for the hearing, Mr Purdon has taken issue with the accuracy or fairness of this transcript.
The 1987 conviction
The Claimant's arrest in 2007
"When, in the course of performing its public duties, a public body (such as a police force) comes into possession of information relating to a member of the public, being information not generally available and potentially damaging to that member of the public if disclosed, the body ought not to disclose such information save for the purpose of and to the extent necessary for performance of its public duty or enabling some other public body to perform its public duty."
"On behalf of the Secretary of State, Mr. Eadie advanced careful and well-balanced submissions as to how the duty (which he accepted existed) to act fairly should be exercised. He agreed that there are cases where it would be desirable, so as to ensure as far as possible that the police are acting on accurate information and so as to ensure the necessary degree of fairness, to afford individuals in the position of the applicants some opportunity to comment. However whether such an opportunity should be afforded and the form that it should take depends on the particular circumstances of a particular former offender. In determining what should be done the overriding priority must remain to protect the public, particularly children and other vulnerable people. The timescale involved may make it not possible to afford an opportunity to comment. The information in the police's hands may be of a category which means that it is unlikely that the subject could be expected to add anything of value. The information available to the police may be information upon which the subject has already had an opportunity to comment. The information may be of a nature which means it would be undesirable for it to be disclosed because of its confidentiality or sensitivity or on the grounds of public interest immunity. There is no formal procedure with which the police should be required to comply. The police should be allowed to act in a sensible pragmatic way. It should be remembered that they have to rely upon the advice of experts and they should not be required to test opinions which they have received from experts.
Our conclusions
We had no difficulty in endorsing Mr Eadie's general approach. Each case must be judged on its own facts. However, in doing this, it must be remembered that the decision to which the police have to come as to whether or not to disclose the identity of paedophiles to members of the public, is a highly sensitive one. Disclosure should only be made when there is a pressing need for that disclosure. Before reaching their decision as to whether to disclose the police require as much information as can reasonably practicably be obtained in the circumstances. In the majority of the situations which can be anticipated, it will be obvious that the subject of the possible disclosure will often be in the best position to provide information which will be valuable when assessing the risk. In this case the gist of what Detective Sgt Lewis had learnt about the applicants should have been disclosed to them. At least consideration should have been given as to whether to disclose the report from the Northumbria Police. This did not happen and we were not made aware of any reason why there could not have been disclosure. The applicants might have had information which would have caused the Detective Sergeant to reassess the degree of risk. Appalling though their record is, their past offending had been confined to children within their family and a friend of one of their children. As to the problem caused by the closeness of the Easter holidays, we do feel that if Detective Sgt Lewis had appreciated the importance of giving the applicants an opportunity to comment at least on the gist of the information he had received, the time constraints under which he was acting would not have made it impracticable to disclose to the applicants what he had learnt. Having said that, bearing in mind that the probation officers were aware of the inaccuracies in the information which had been provided by the Northumbria Police but was still of the opinion that the applicants created a high degree of risk, we do not accept that any information which the applicants could have given, if they had been given the opportunity to comment, would have altered the outcome.
"Both under the Convention and as a matter of English administrative law, the police are entitled to use information when they reasonably conclude this is what is required (after taking into account the interests of the applicants), in order to protect the public and in particular children….However, where the use in question is decided upon as a result of the exercise of an honest judgment of professional police officers, that will of itself, go a long way to establish its reasonableness."
The Court would be slow to characterise as irrational an operational decision to disclose information about sexual offenders where the motive of the police was to protect children and the endorsement of disclosure by other agencies was influential in persuading the court that the decision could not be regarded as irrational - see p. 430.
"Even if the request comes from a local authority, some assessment should be made of the need of that authority to know about the allegations. The need to disclose is clearly more pressing if the authority are considering employment of the person in a residential home for children than, say, as a traffic warden to escort children across the road. Some assessment should, therefore, be made of the level and quality of access to children that is likely to be available to the person about whom the information is held. Paragraph 15 of the circular provides valuable guidance as to the factors that should be taken into account in deciding whether to seek or undertake a police check. These are: does the position involve one-to-one contact? Is the position unsupervised? Is the situation an isolated one? Is there regularly contact? Are the children particularly vulnerable?"
Disclosure of the 2007 arrest
a. The police failed to ascertain the extent to which he came into contact with children in the course of his employment and/or the police misunderstood the nature of his employment. The police acted unfairly towards the Claimant because they did not consult him before taking the decision to disclose.
b. The police failed to inquire into the strength of the 2007 allegation and the likelihood of him being charged.
c. The decision to disclose the 2007 allegation was perverse given the decision not to disclose the 2001 allegation.
d. The test of pressing need for disclosure was not met.
e. The disclosure was unlawful because it was made to Mr S and not Mr O.
Failure to ascertain the extent of the Claimant's contact with children in the course of his employment
Failure to inquire into the strength of the 2007 allegation
The decision to disclose the 2007 allegations but not the 2001 allegation
The test of pressing need was not met
"Through ill-informed employment decisions, the extent of his access to children could change and potentially increase at any time. It was my view that there was a pressing need to disclose in order that a meaningful discussion could take place with the employer to both confirm present working arrangements and to effectively manage current and future risk."
ACC Vant also took account of the fact that the local authority's Children's Services Department was supportive of disclosure.
"This request seeks authority to disclose a previous sexually motivated conviction and two arrests for sexually motivated crime to the subject's employer … to allow them to make a considered judgment on what capacity they should employ [the Claimant] and with what responsibilities."
That seems to me to embrace the question of both present and future working arrangements; present and future risk. The need to have both present and future in mind was obvious. Working practices can change. The briefing paper recorded the information that DS Colling had received from the Claimant that "he does deliver to houses but that he was never left alone when doing so." Even if this was so, ACC Vant's comment that disclosure needed to take place so that a meaningful discussion could take place with the employer to confirm the existing working arrangements and to effectively manage current and future risk was sensible. It accorded with the passage from the briefing document which I have just quoted.
The disclosure to Mr S rather than Mr O
conclusion