header-logo header-logo

Bar highlights risks of Data Protection Bill

07 March 2018
Issue: 7784 / Categories: Legal News , Data protection
printer mail-detail

New powers may allow access without consent

The Data Protection Bill could interfere with legal professional privilege and stop legitimate legal challenges against Home Office immigration decisions, the Bar Council has warned.

The Bar set out the risks in two briefings to MPs preparing to debate the Bill this week at its Second Reading.

First, the Bill imposes a duty on lawyers to give the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) access to legally privileged material, thus undermining the centuries-old right to confidential legal advice. Lawyers will be obliged to notify clients of this risk.

As well as the risk of onward disclosure by the ICO's staff, there would be a conflict between the lawyer’s professional and legal obligations. Moreover, the Bill could have a chilling effect on client communications, and risks placing UK legal services at a disadvantage to their international competitors.

‘The irony is that these powers are designed to give citizens more control and protection over how their data are used, but the effect will be to allow access to their legally privileged communications without their consent,’ Chair of the Bar Andrew Walker QC said.

Second, the Bill gives the Home Office an ‘immigration-control exemption’—allowing it, for immigration-control purposes, to deny individuals access to their personal data.

Walker said: ‘Making Subject Access Requests is often the only way for people who are in the immigration system to find out crucial information relevant to their immigration status, and even to find out the very basis for adverse decisions that the Home Office has already made about them.

‘This information is vital for anyone who is challenging their detention or a deportation notice, or for those making applications for asylum or to remain in the UK. Blocking access to this information will insulate the Home Office from legitimate challenges to the legality of its decision-making.’

He said the Home Office’s decision-making record was ‘notoriously poor’, and that Lord Rogers told Parliament last month that it had lost about 250,000 appeals in the ten years to 2015.

Issue: 7784 / Categories: Legal News , Data protection
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Gibson Dunn—London partner promotions

Gibson Dunn—London partner promotions

Firm grows international bench with expanded UK partner class

Shakespeare Martineau—six appointments

Shakespeare Martineau—six appointments

Firm makes major statement in the capital with strategic growth at The Shard

Myers & Co—Jess Latham

Myers & Co—Jess Latham

Residential conveyancing team expands with solicitor hire

NEWS
One in five in-house lawyers suffer ‘high’ or ‘severe’ work-related stress, according to a report by global legal body, the Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC)
The Legal Ombudsman’s (LeO’s) plea for a budget increase has been rejected by the Law Society and accepted only ‘with reluctance’ by conveyancers
Overcrowded prisons, mental health hospitals and immigration centres are failing to meet international and domestic human rights standards, the National Preventive Mechanism (NPM) has warned
Two speedier and more streamlined qualification routes have been launched for probate and conveyancing professionals
Workplace stress was a contributing factor in almost one in eight cases before the employment tribunal last year, indicating its endemic grip on the UK workplace
back-to-top-scroll