Locations
The Court of Appeal in the UK has found that the system which requires previous criminal convictions to be disclosed amounted, in certain circumstances, to a breach of a person’s right to privacy in the case of R (on the application of P) v Secretary of State for Home Department.
The original disclosure scheme was first set out under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act, 1974 as amended by the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 1998, and the Police Act 1997. The origin...
The Court of Appeal in the UK has found that the system which requires previous criminal convictions to be disclosed amounted, in certain circumstances, to a breach of a person’s right to privacy in the case of R (on the application of P) v Secretary of State for Home Department.
The original disclosure scheme was first set out under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act, 1974 as amended by the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 1998, and the Police Act 1997. The original legislation provided that disclosures must include details of all convictions and cautions, current or spent, and irrespective of the nature of the offence. This applied to all persons regardless of their age at the time of commission of the offence.
This legislation was challenged in 2014 and the challenge was successful. The legislation was thereafter amended by secondary legislation which greatly narrowed the scope of disclosures to the following general categories:
- Current convictions or cautions (dependant on certain factors for example, time elapsed and the age of the person at the time);
- Any spent conviction or caution in relation to certain offences listed in various pieces of legislation (the “serious offence rule”);
- Any spent conviction where a custodial sentence was imposed;
- Any spent conviction where the person has more than one conviction (the “multiple conviction rule”).
- the person was under the age of 18 at the time of the offence;
- the offence is not required to be tried in the Central Criminal Court;
- a period of 3 years has elapsed since the finding of guilt; and,
- the person has not reoffended in that period. If all these criteria are met, the offence will be removed from the person’s record.
- not less than 7 years shall have passed since the date of the conviction;
- the sentence imposed is not an excluded sentence;
- the person shall have served or complied with any sentence imposed, or order made by the court; and,
- The person does not have more than one conviction.