Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The police even follow me into the loo

Copy of a page of the police officer’s notebook referencing Marc Vallée
Photocopy of a police officer’s notebook received by Marc Vallée after a data protection request.

The Metropolitan police are reluctant to reveal why they've been filming journalists. But we've got a special weapon – the law

On Monday – the day the Guardian published a police surveillance film showing Emily Apple and Val Swain being violently arrested at the Kingsnorth climate camp last year – solicitors acting for the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) wrote to Christopher Graham, the new information commissioner to make a formal complaint on behalf of five frontline journalists – I am one of them.

Why the complaint? For some time now the NUJ has had "serious concerns about the manner in which press-card carrying journalists are being monitored by the police, specifically by the Metropolitan police's forward intelligence team (Fit)".

These concerns have been raised by the NUJ general secretary, Jeremy Dear, in ­letters to and meetings with the Home Office and the Metropolitan police. The NUJ

"suspect that certain journalists are the target of police surveillance because they speak to people who the police ­consider to be "anarchists"; and/or because they frequently cover protest situations; and/or because the police consider them likely to have footage which may be relevant in criminal proceedings involving others".

As the complaint states, all the journalists have been

"filmed and photographed on numerous occasions by the forward intelligence teams; they are clearly known by the Fit officers as they are referred to by name; their personal details have been taken by officers on many occasions; and they have all been subjected to repeated searches under section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and/or section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994."

When covering a Gaza protest early this year, I was even followed by two Fit officers when I nipped into a pub to use the toilet.

In an attempt to get a clearer picture of the extent of police monitoring, five journalists – including me – applied to the Met and other police services in an attempt to discover what information is being held on us – photographs, documentation, details of when we have been stopped and searched. The Data Protection Act 1998 gives the public the right of subject access: in short, the right to find out what information is held about us in electronic and paper records.

In my case, the only piece of data that I have received from the Metropolitan police service after a four-month wait was a copy of a page of a police officer's notebook (above). This is despite the fact I sued the Met in 2006, and in legal correspondence the Met refers to Fit film footage of me being assaulted by police officers. The purpose of the NUJ letter was to see if the information commissioner "would be willing to investigate whether the ­Metropolitan police service are ­complying with their obligations under the Data ­Protection Act 1988 and Human Rights Act 1998."

Why is this important? Why are the police targeting journalists in this way? And why are the police refusing to hand over the files when requested?

If this type of targeting worked, investigations by the press into police treatment of groups such as Fit Watch would not see the light of day. To me it seems clear that the police are targeting journalists to discourage us from working on investigations they do not like.

At the NUJ photographers' conference in May, Roy Mincoff – the NUJ legal officer – asked for an assurance from Commander Bob Broadhurst, the head of the Met's public order branch and boss of the Fit, that journalists' details were not being kept on a database.

His reply did not inspire confidence:

"What I will do on that one is I'll give you a written answer. I'm pretty sure we don't. There might be the odd journalist whose name we know and whose photograph appears somewhere and to say we don't keep a database and then you'll find that one or two are on it. I can guarantee that we don't as a matter course take your photographs to create a database."

The NUJ is still waiting for that letter

Source: The Guardian

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