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July 7, 2009

Naming fugitives breaches their privacy, newspaper told

By and PA Mediapoint

The Ministry of Justice has turned down a Freedom of Information request from the East Anglian Daily Times for the names of local prisoners who are on-the-run – in case it breaches their right to privacy.

The Archant-owned daily paper, based in Ipswich, requested details of every prisoner who had absconded from Hollesley Bay open prison in Woodbridge, Suffolk, over a two-year period.

The newspaper was told 39 inmates had left the prison between 1 January 2007 and 31 March 2009, and was given details of the crimes they had committed.

But the MoJ said naming the fugitives would breach data protection rules – even though the police routinely issue details and photographs of fugitives at the time they escape.

The ministry also claimed that releasing the information could prejudice police investigations.

Suffolk Coastal MP John Gummer said he would raise the matter with justice secretary Jack Straw.

“It’s intolerable and entirely unacceptable,” he said. “There is no sense in which a prisoner’s identity is a private matter.

“In my view he sacrifices that when he becomes a prisoner.

“This annoys me very much indeed. We have gone mad if this is what we are doing.”

In a letter refusing the request, officials wrote: “It is the general policy of the Ministry of Justice not to disclose, to a third party, personal information about another person.

“This is because the Ministry of Justice has obligations under the Data Protection Act and in law generally to protect this information.”

Shadow justice secretary Dominic Grieve said: “The government is not obliged by the law on privacy to withhold the identity of fugitive prisoners, where it helps prevent crime or protect the public.

“The justice secretary must stop blaming his own legislation for his own lack of transparency – it only fuels public suspicion that he is really trying to avoid political embarrassment.”

A prison service spokesman said: “When someone absconds from prison, the Ministry of Justice provides journalists with the prisoner’s name and details of their offence, unless a court order is in place preventing us from doing so.

“However, any further release of information must be an operational matter for the police.”

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