11 November 2001. Thanks to HB.
Public Statement on Standards in Covert Law Enforcement Techniques
Codes of Practice (separate files)
Use of Informants (288KB)Surveillance (286KB)
Undercover Operations (274KB)
Interception of Communications and Accessing Communications Data (313KB)
The Recording and Dissemination of Intelligence Material (277KB)
The principal United Kingdom law enforcement agencies* are committed to the maintenance of working practices which observe their obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights.
* This declaration is jointly issued by the Association of Chief Police Officers, the Association qf Chief Police Officers in Scotland, Her Majesty's Chstoms and Excise and the Directors General of the National Crime Squad and the National Criminal Intelligence Service.
Those working practices seek to achieve a balance between the requirement to work within a defined framework for the safeguarding of civil liberties and the maintenance of a robust approach to the tackling of crime and criminality.
This document sets out in general terms:
Part 1 the case for covert law enforcement techniques in the light of the threat from serious crime and criminality;
Part 2 the ethical precepts to which the law enforcement agencies subscribe in the conduct of covert operations;
Part 3 the commitment of the law enforcement agencies to common standards of integrity in the collection, storage and use of intelligence and sensitive investigative material;
Part 4 the commitment of the law enforcement agencies to the auditing
of standards and the provision of effective complaints and redress procedures
for infringements of rights conferred by the Convention.
The threat from crime
Serious crime and organised criminality are corrosive of civilised society. The growth in the threat from crime has been acknowledged both by Parliament and the courts in the provision of increased powers for law enforcement and in support for the principle of public interest immunity in the defence of both intelligence sources and those sensitive investigative techniques, the revelation of which to determined criminals would undermine the continuing operational effectiveness of the techniques.
The law enforcement agencies seek to tackle the consequences of serious crime
and organised criminality at several levels simultaneously:
The intelligence requirement
The challenge offered to law enforcement agencies is to design and sustain, within the rule of law, preventive and investigative techniques that meet the requirements of each of the described levels. The key to effective law enforcement stratagems is the ability to describe and analyse the nature of the criminal problem.
Such a description and analysis are products of the effective collection
of intelligence. The tackling of serious crime and organised criminality
requires:
In the face of criminals' determination to protect their criminal activity from exposure, the collection of intelligence demands the application of both overt and covert investigative techniques.
Investigation and evidence
Notwithstanding the essential nature of intelligence work, the primary responsibility of the law enforcement agencies remains to collect evidence to the standard that will ensure the conviction of serious offenders before the Courts. The effective collection of intelligence on active criminals and their organisations enables investigation to be accurately targeted with minimum interference to the fives and liberties of individual citizens. The police and HM Customs and Excise are neither able nor desirous of embarking on 'fishing expeditions' which collect information on individuals regardless of value to the prevention or detection of crime.
In the face of sophisticated attempts by determined criminals and those bent on violent disorder to disable investigation, the law enforcement agencies consider it essential to be able to continue to collect evidence through use of the same covert techniques. Indeed, the use of covert techniques is now the major component of operations targeting criminals at all levels. The agencies argue strongly from experience that failure to maintain effective covert capability would fatally undermine the national law enforcement effort.
The 'techniques' to which this document refers are:
The continuing effectiveness of some of those techniques may be undermined
by their exposure in court proceedings. The agencies therefore seek also
the continuing protection of the principle of public interest immunity for
such sensitive covert techniques. The application to all such investigations
of the standards described in the following pages is an appropriate balance
to operational secrecy.
The law enforcement agencies are committed to standards of conduct in covert
operations that accord with the requirements of the European Convention on
Human Rights (ECHR). In particular, in addition to the legal requirements
relating to 'intrusive surveillance' in Part III of the Police Act 1997,
and the requirements of the Interception of Communications Act 1985 and the
Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949 concerning interception of communications, they
will:
The following specific commitments to standards give effect to the fundamental
ethical precepts set out above:
public interest immunity - in accordance with the law, the police and HM Customs and Excise will continue to apply in the Courts, or to the Lord Advocate in Scotland, for public interest immunity to be granted to informants, confidential sources and information, or to sensitive covert techniques. Such applications will, however, be made only where there are grounds to believe that harm to informants or other sources will follow from disclosure of their identities or where disclosure would damage the future effectiveness of a covert investigative technique or would harm an ongoing investigation.
The law enforcement agencies will maintain the standards set out in this paper and provide facilities for the reception and investigation of complaints about breaches of privacy and provide means for redress.
Officers engaged upon investigations embracing the covert techniques described will be adequately trained in those techniques and in the legal and ethical considerations which concern them.
Tbe agencies provide a complaints and investigation procedure where none is otherwise provided by law, in respect of complaints of invasions of privacy under Article 8 of the ECHR.
The police service and HM Customs and Excise provide redress for established cases of unjustified invasion of privacy. The agencies nevertheless reject the principle of notifying persons who have been the subject of covert investigation following the conclusion of the investigation. Such notifications would, it is believed, provide serious criminals with valuable insights into the conduct of covert investigations, the deployment of police and HM Customs and Excise resources, and weaken the ability to protect sources of intelligence.
The agencies welcome the opportunity to regulate their covert activity according to the precepts of the ECHR. Such regulation has already been established in many areas and will be consolidated by the publication of codes of practice governing all covert techniques which will supplement the regulation provided currently by law. Each police force and HM Customs and Excise will appoint an officer of chief officer rank who will be responsible for the maintenance of the standards herein.
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