European Court DNA ruling dismays UK Government
By Max Blain
12/9/2008
In a landmark judgement at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, judges decided that South Yorkshire Police was wrong to keep the DNA records of two men who had been cleared of any wrongdoing.
The ruling could force the Government to remove the DNA details of hundreds of thousands of people from the current total of around 4.5 million that are held on the National DNA Database, which covers England, Wales and Northern Ireland. It will not affect Scottish forces as they already destroy samples of people who are not charged or who are acquitted.
Chris Sims, the ACPO lead on forensics and chief constable of Staffordshire Police, said the judgment could have a 'profound impact on the service'. 121 of 584 words
Most Viewed Articles
- Dassault in bid to undermine Gripen in Switzerland
- US to withdraw two brigade combat teams from Europe
- Iran unveils guided artillery
- JTIC Brief: MNLA re-awakens Tuareg separatism in Mali
- Analysis: UK's White Paper leaves central contradiction unsolved
- Interview: Ng Eng Hen, Singaporean Minister of Defence
- Russia steps up ambitious reforms
- Briefing: Punching above its weight
- US budget cuts to hit airlift fleet
- Uprising tide - Arab Spring Islamists concern the US
United States













