UK Parliament / Open data

Protection of Freedoms Bill

We did have to make those judgments when we were in government, and our judgment was that the having the envelope of six years was consistent with our European obligations, and also with the pattern of offending. If people had not reoffended within the six years, the likelihood of further offences diminished considerably. People tended to reoffend within a one-year to six-year period. I genuinely take my hon. Friend's concerns about the retention of DNA impacting on people's civil liberties. However, I support what the hon. Member for Shipley said as being raped, murdered or subjected to serious crimes also has an impact on people's civil liberties. As a Minister I had to make a balanced judgment, and the judgment reached by me and by my colleagues was that six years was an appropriate limit. There is an honest disagreement between the present Minister and me about that. The Government's own research—research carried out by the Home Office in July 2010—found that 23,000 people every year whose DNA would be retained on the database as a result of our proposals, but that would not be as a result of the Government's, would commit further offences. We are talking about 23,000 further offences. My amendment may be flawed—I do not have recourse to all the fine civil servants who are available to the Department—but my aim was to initiate a discussion about sexual offences, and to persuade the Minister to reflect on the issues once more before the Government's proposals became law.

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Reference

542 c566 

Session

2010-12

Chamber / Committee

House of Commons chamber
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