You are reprimanded
..for losing data in your own car. You are supposed to lose it in a train car !
Kent Police has been reprimanded by the Information Commissioner's Office and has promised to improve policies following the loss of private data from the back of a car. Adrian Leppard, temporary Chief Constable of Kent Police, has signed an undertaking to improve policies. The data was left in the boot of an officer's car …
Surely any information warranting the ICO getting involved shouldn't be removed from secure premises anyway.
Saying that, my cousin baby-sat for my GP a couple of times, one of which she found about 20 medical files on the kitchen table (This was around a decade ago). Everyone's at it, apparently.
There's no lesson there.
Maybe if the Police did more to combat casual crime this wouldn't happen.
Wish I had of been there to say. 'Well you shouldn't have left it in your car!, that just asking for trouble'.
in quotes because that what the Police said to me......Not so funny now when it happens to you!
"Adrian Leppard, temporary Chief Constable of Kent Police, has signed an undertaking to improve policies." With what consequences and what punishment if he fails? They always just say sorry and do it again within a week. There have been dozens of stories of this type (not all the police -- sometimes NHS etc.) this year in The Reg already.
Just one thing to think about - where do Kent's finest get their money from?
Penalising the taxpayers of Kent because someone stuffed up is hardly fair is it? Far better to take the (ir)responsible officer and shove him in the cells for a couple of nights, with exactly the same treatment given to members of the public.
Taking a dozen bobbies off the beat, or closing down a small 'village' station because some muppet fsck'd up is hardly helping the community, is it??
Is nothing new, just make a complaint to the professional standards department and watch how quickly the plod they are investigating lose stuff, from arrest records to interview tapes to PNB's.
Start issuing the fine to the pension fund and see how quickly the data management improves, that way the tax payer isnt impacted.
One law for them, another for the rest of us. When was it ever different?
Is this the way they'd have been treating data if we'd continued with ID cards?
A slap on the wrist for a 'rare' occurrence that we all know happens all the time. A square ticked on official forms and honour is satisfied - inside the establishment anyway.
And it doesn't just affect police records - one way or another (officially or unofficially - thank you Brother) they have access to all sorts of stuff we assume is strictly private. If the data isn't at risk in authorised hands (big 'if'), it probably is once it gets into theirs. They certainly have access to library borrowing records in this area.