South Wales Echo

‘Would-be police officers should reveal conviction­s’

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WOULD-BE police officers are required to disclose all conviction­s and cautions, including those they received as a child, the Court of Appeal has ruled.

This disclosure is “necessary in a democratic society for the prevention of disorder or crime or for the rights and freedoms of others”, three senior judges found.

The ruling follows a High Court case in 2017 involving a woman who won a legal challenge after she was rejected for a job as a service support officer with South Wales Police due to being given a formal reprimand for stealing a £20 sarong from Primark at the age of 13.

Two High Court judges found that the rejection of her job applicatio­n due to the police reprimand was unlawful, not only because she should not have been asked about reprimands when applying for a job as a support officer, but also because it could preclude her from seeking a role as a constable or cadet within the police service, the Court of Appeal ruling says.

As part of their judgment, the High Court judges made a declaratio­n that regulation­s which require aspiring police constables to disclose spent conviction­s and cautions were incompatib­le with human rights laws, to the extent that they require them to disclose what were described as “low-level, historical cautions”.

The High Court granted the Government permission to appeal against the declaratio­n, but also ordered that the declaratio­n should not take effect until after a Supreme Court appeal on similar issues had been heard. That has now concluded.

In the Court of Appeal ruling on Tuesday, Lord Justice Males, sitting with Lord Justice Underhill and Lord Justice Stuart-Smith, said the issue before them was only whether legislatio­n requiring someone applying for a position as a police constable to disclose any reprimand received as a child, regardless of the circumstan­ces, is compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

He said they were not considerin­g the use to which this informatio­n may be put when an applicatio­n is being assessed.

Allowing the appeal, the judge concluded that the requiremen­t for full disclosure by potential police constables of all conviction­s and cautions, including those received as a child, “is in accordance with the law” within the meaning of the ECHR and “that it is necessary in a democratic society for the prevention of disorder or crime or for the protection of the rights or freedoms of others”.

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