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Sir, The Damian Green case and the unsuccessful prosecution of the journalist Sally Murrer raise the question of whether the offence of misconduct in public office is now being used as a way of recriminalising the leaking of official information.
For many years any leak of official information on any subject — damaging or innocuous — was an offence under Section 2 of the 1911 Official Secrets Act. The 1989 Official Secrets Act changed this. It limited the offence to unauthorised and damaging disclosures relating to the work of the security and intelligence services, defence, international relations and law enforcement or to the obtaining of information under certain warrants, for example to intercept communications.
The 1988 White Paper that announced the reform made clear that disclosures that were merely “undesirable, a betrayal of trust or an embarrassment to the Government” would not be punishable by the criminal law. Introducing the new legislation Douglas Hurd, then the Conservative Home Secretary, explained that it “will remove the protection of the criminal law from the great bulk of sensitive and important information — including policy documents, Cabinet discussions on education, on health and on social security, and economic information and budget preparations. None of them will any longer have the protection of the criminal law.” Such disclosures might lead to disciplinary action — but not prosecution.
The disclosures that the Home Office civil servant are alleged to have made not only fall within the broad class of information deliberately removed from these criminal sanctions but in some cases are likely to be disclosable under the Freedom of Information Act. How has the clock been turned back to make such disclosures the subject of police investigations, arrests and possible prosecutions?
Maurice Frankel
Director, Campaign for Freedom of Information
Sir, William Rees-Mogg is mistaken in stating that the arrest of Damian Green constitutes “the most serious breach of the privilege of Parliament in modern times” (Opinion, Dec 1). Erskine May, the parliamentary bible, makes it clear that “Freedom from arrest has never been allowed to interfere with the administration of criminal justice — consequently the freedom is relevant only to arrest in civil cases”.
Vernon Bogdanor
Professor of Government
Brasenose College, Oxford
Sir, There is a long history of political leaders whose careers have been enhanced through being “jailed by the British”. I am nipping off to Ladbrokes to place a decent bet on Damian Green holding high office under David Cameron.
Alistair Burt, MP
London SW1
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