Richard Ford, Home Correspondent
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Serious offenders on the run from the Netherlands have been able to commit further crimes in Britain after the Crown Prosecution Service mislaid a computer disc containing their details.
Home Office ministers were told within the past two or three weeks that a disc containing details of 4,000 offenders whom the Dutch authorities wished to trace had been missing for almost a year.
The disc contained DNA details of 4,000 offenders, some of whom are believed to be murderers and rapists, which the Dutch sent to Britain to be checked against the national DNA database.
Initial checks on 2,000 samples carried out by police since the disc was discovered last month have found matches against 15 people, including 11 who have committed further crimes in Britain during the past year. But the figures could be higher, as a team of police officers still have to carry out checks on a further 2,000 samples provided by the Dutch authorities.
The latest data controversy occured after the Dutch authorities tried to track down 4,000 Dutch citizens who were on the run after committing serious crimes. They sent a disc containing the DNA samples of the offenders to a number of EU states, including Britain.
The disc to the Attorney-General in Britain was sent in January last year with a request that the details be checked against the country’s national DNA database.
It was then sent to the Crown Prosecution Service but disappeared. It was not until last month that it was found and sent to the National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA), which oversees the DNA database. Whitehall sources said yesterday that it was only when the NPIA received the disc and realised what it contained that Home Office ministers were informed of what had happened.
It is not clear exactly when Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, was informed of the latest blunder to hit the justice system over the records of offenders.
David Ruffley, the Shadow Police Minister, said yesterday: “By losing this DNA disc the Government has allowed people judged serious criminals by the Dutch to stay in the UK and commit offences. Government incompetence has put the safety of our citizens at risk yet again.
“The public will want the Home Secretary to tell them what offences these individuals have committed and if they are going to be extradited.”
David Davis, the Shadow Home Secretary, said: “Yet again we see a disastrous loss of data which has an impact for public security and public safety.”
A statement from the Crown Prosecution Service said: “We can confirm that DNA profiles of around 2,000 unknown individuals were sent by a foreign jurisdiction to the CPS to facilitate a check against the national DNA database.
“These are profiles relating to unsolved crimes in that country. This is not a data security issue as this information was always in the possession of the CPS.”
The statement added: “As this information necessarily relates to ongoing police investigations it would be inappropriate to provide any more detail at this stage.”
The disc went missing at the Crown Prosecution Service in the same month that it emerged that 27,000 paper records on British citizens who had committed crimes abroad had been left in boxes in the Home Office rather than being entered on the Police National Computer.
A Home Office spokesman said that as soon as the National Policing Improvement Agency was told about the discovery of the discs by the Crown Prosecution Service, the agency informed ministers. “When they began carrying out the checks they then informed the Association of Chief Police Officers and the Home Office of the results,” the spokesman added.
Timetable of missing data blunders
January 2007 Revealed that since 1997 nearly 1,600 government computers
containing sensitive information had been stolen
September A CD containing the names, national insurance numbers, dates
of birth and pension data of 15,000 Standard Life customers lost
October Laptop with data about 2,000 people with ISAs stolen from a
Revenue & Customs employee
November 20 News of two CDs with details of 25 million Britons lost in
post from a Revenue & Customs office in Tyne & Wear November 23
Emerges that six more CDs with confidential information had gone missing
December 6 Four CDs containing details from court cases go missing
December 17 Details of three million British learner drivers lost in
the US
December 18 Revenue loses data of 6,500 private pension holders
December 23 Nine NHS trusts in England say they have lost patient
records kept on discs
January 9, 2008 Laptop with details of 600,000 people taken from navy
officer’s car in Birmingham
January 26 Details of 1,500 students lost in the post

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I thought French administration was a joke but recent and recurrent UK data losses are making France look like a model of organisation and rigor... Or maybe French administration doesn't tell anyone when such blunders happen... it is possible too, who knows....
What is going on? Are these losses caused by malicious infiltrated "criminals" or just pure incompetence? Surely, there must be some back ups on these systems...
Maybe UK administration workers should go on IT courses
Isabelle, Maisons-Laffitte, France
Isn't it time that the tories not only took the government to task, but said how they will rectify it (and all the other Lapses of this incompetent government) if they come to power? It is all very well to kick a dead horse but unless you have a plan to get it out of the road there isn't much point..
I am waiting to see the tories put forward any proper plans to rectify the state of this country, till rthey do that how do we know they will not be worse than the present incumbents.
Cameron has been leader for long enough to start putting forward policies (or isn't he up to the tough bits of government).
Howard, Basildon, England
It really doesn't matter what it is that's been "Mislaid" or whether there were consequences. What does matter is the consistent proof that those "in charge" cant be trusted with our data.
Paula, E Yorks,
A general election please.Now.
The only way to solve this government's incompetence on these data loss cases and the rest of their dossier of failures is to get rid of them.
Wouldn't it be interesting if all the details of the people that voted for them were "lost"......
Ben, London,
"a disc containing the DNA samples"
Surely you mean "a disc containing the DNA profiles"? Sorry to be a pedant but I would expect more from The Times.
DR, Berlin,
Another day, another horse found bolted from the Home Office stable. Asses, Donkeys and stubborn Mules.
michael murphy, birightlingsea, essex, england
And this is the government that wants to introduce a global DNA database!! There are so many cases like this, with sensitive data going missing, turning up in car parks, being stolen from royal mail vans (the list is seamingly endless) that it causes very serious and legitimate concerns about security (why would sensitive personal data even be sent via standard mail is a question that I'd like to have answered !!).
Its not the DNA profiling or even the database itself that worries me - its cases like this. If the govt cannot absolutley GUARANTEE data security (which the quite demonstrably can't) then how can the even dream of thinking about suggesting that a DNA databse would be in any way a good idea?
andy, worthing, UK
Oh I think that they should go for a more sophisticated method of keeping records - perhaps tying a knot in a used hankerchief - one will always remember, and no one will ever want to steal it.
Stephen Pain, odense, denmark
Why are the government still allowing information to be put onto discs? Nobody does this. None of the companies I have ever worked for have allowed this. My current company blocks all r/w prts and orders employee PC's without writeable disc acess.
Why is tuff being put onto CD's and sent through the mail. Its pretty monumentaly stupid.
However this begs the question. Is the occurence of these events really acidental? Are government organisations really that incompetent or is this an organised campaign.
I feel its very suspicious that someone knows about lost discs? Also that laptops and discs are accidentally on purpose just found in public places. Hmm!
Dave Bowes, kelso, borders
William you make a fair point which i agree with but surely you must also acknowledge that Labour is play into the tories hands. I struggle to remember the last time a week went by without a news story about government incompetence. When considering that the majority of people under 30 will not remember, or have been interested in politics the last time the tories were in government, and considering the present quality of life of an under 30 (House prices, higher debt, higher uni fees, high fuel cost, general lack of community spirit, etc) it is as if New Labour has become Old Tory.....
Grant, london,
The Conservatives do themselves no favours by descibing this as "a disastrous loss of data". It was an administrative delay while someone was ill. That the criminals have re-offended in our country is obviously unfortunate but having their DNA in advance cannot stop them offending. It is an excellent tool for securing convictions but as 11 of the 15 only offended recently by definition the check would not have helped convict them a year ago.
It also brings wider issues of sharing DNA data with foreign governments - something I am not aware the Conservatives plublicising a policy on. Perhaps they should stop playing to Daily Mail readers at the expense of civil servants and put some effort into something constructive.
William, Bristol,