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Two convicted in U.K. for refusal to decrypt data

Frank Merlott | 23.08.2009 22:08 | Technology

Two people have been successfully prosecuted for refusing to provide U.K. authorities with their encryption keys, resulting in landmark convictions that may have carried jail sentences of up to five years.

The British government said today it does not know their fate.

The power to force people to unscramble their data was granted to authorities in October 2007. Between 1 April, 2008 and 31 March this year the first two convictions were obtained.

The disclosure was made by Sir Christopher Rose, the government's Chief Surveillance Commissioner, in his recent annual report.

The former High Court judge did not provide details of the crimes being investigated in the case of either individual — neither of whom were necessarily suspects — nor of the sentences they received.

The Crown Prosecution Service said it was unable to track down information on the legal milestones without the defendants' names.

Failure to comply with a section 49 notice carries a sentence of up to two years jail plus fines. Failure to comply during a national security investigation carries up to five years jail.

Sir Christopher reported that all of the 15 section 49 notices served over the year - including the two that resulted in convictions - were in "counter terrorism, child indecency and domestic extremism" cases.

The Register has established that the woman served with the first section 49 notice, as part of an animal rights extremism investigation, was not one of those convicted for failing to comply. She was later convicted and jailed on blackmail charges.

Of the 15 individuals served, 11 did not comply with the notices. Of the 11, seven were charged and two convicted. Sir Christopher did not report whether prosecutions failed or are pending against the five charged but not convicted in the period covered by his report.

To obtain a section 49 notice, police forces must first apply to the National Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC). Although its web presence suggests NTAC is part of the Home Office's Office of Security and Counter Terrorism, it is in fact located at the government's secretive Cheltenham code breaking centre, GCHQ.

GCHQ didn't immediately respond to a request for further information on the convictions. The Home Office said NTAC does not know the outcomes of the notices it approves.

NTAC approved a total of 26 applications for a section 49 notice during the period covered by the Chief Surveillance Commissioner's report, which does not say if any applications were refused. The judicial permission necessary to serve the notices was then sought in 17 cases. Judges did not refuse permission in any case.

One police force obtained and served a section 49 notice without NTAC approval while acting on "incorrect information from the Police National Legal Database", according to Sir Christopher. The action was dropped before it reached court.

Source:
 http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11556

Frank Merlott
- Homepage: http://www.privacylover.com

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Encrypt to survive

23.08.2009 22:26

Anyone can set a TrueCrypt partition. You don't have to use it once its set-up. You don't have to use 'plausible deniability' to hide the contents. But the battle over encryption has already been won. A mass show of solidarity is of no risk to you and of great benefit to those who are risking themselves defending your liberties.

Other peoples legal encryption equals your liberty. Fuck the state - in a gentle way.

Danny


Outrageous!

23.08.2009 22:52

Who actually was those two guys? Are they any left?

Ninja


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The Enemy Within is THE STATE

24.08.2009 10:32

The good thing about this story is the implicit message that two people – whoever they are – had the balls to stand up and say NO.
We should all take inspiration from their example and resist.

The STATE is now CRIMINAL.
Guilty of deliberate, pre-meditated murder (John Menezes)
Guilty of serious violations of International and British law (Violent, Aggressive war)
Guilty of fraud (multiple serious instances of deception of both the public and the parliament in obtaining support for an illegal war)
Guilty of perversion of the course of justice (A British High Court judge unilaterally declares “matters of decisions to go to war” to be NOT JUSTICIABLE)

The STATE is CRIMINAL and is the enemy of all those who expect and demand that government should observe the law, both national and international, respect human life and dignity, act honourably with integrity and regard to justice.
The Enemy Within is THE STATE

Allen L. Jasson
mail e-mail: allen.jasson@rightofchoice.com
- Homepage: http://51 Haig Court


they have tried this on with animal rights activists a lot

25.08.2009 00:11

Encryption, especially PGP, is very popular in the animal rights world. They have threatened several people legally to give up their decryption keys but have never followed it through as far as I know.

I have no knowledge, but I wouldn't be surprised if the two convicted of not handing over their decryption keys were paedophiles.

vegan


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