The Scotsman

Ministers at risk of breaking the law over FOI requests

- By TOM EDEN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Government ministers and special advisers are breaking the law if they refuse to hand over mobile phones and private email accounts relating to freedom of informatio­n requests, a former informatio­n commission­er has said.

Professor Kevin Dunion, Scotland’s first informatio­n commission­er, told MSPS “the law is clear” about public officials having to declare if asked - that they are storing informatio­n within the scope of a freedom of informatio­n (FOI) request.

Despite ministers being compelled to reveal details of official business conducted via text, Whatsapp or personal email, Prof Dunion told a Holyrood committee he had never seen any such informatio­n published under FOI laws.

During the evidence session, Scottish Labour MSP Anas Sarwar argued such communicat­ions “undoubtedl­y happen”, suggesting government ministers have broken the law by not complying with the full scope of the FOI requiremen­ts.

Explaining that informatio­n commission­ers have the right to inspect any personal device which was used to store official informatio­n or for business activity, Prof Dunion said: “Anyone found to have withheld informatio­n contrary to the FOI laws could face a £5,000 fine.

“They have broken the law if they deny they have the informatio­n within the scope of the request and the note exists in whatever form - whether it’s sitting in their briefcase or sitting in their Hotmail account.

“If an FOI request comes in and you don’t disclose the fact that you hold the informatio­n on that device, you are in danger of being prosecuted for obstructin­g the release of informatio­n.

“My concern, therefore, is that this is not being readily understood and people are endangerin­g themselves by thinking they are getting around the law by doing that.”

Although the law allows personal devices potentiall­y used for official business to be searched in relation to an FOI request, Prof Dunion suggested there would need to be evidence it had taken place and was “not something an informatio­n commission­er would do lightly”.

Profdunion,whoisnowco­nvener of the Standards Commission for Scotland, told the Post-legislativ­e Scrutiny Committee that he fears people in the public sector have a “temptation” to try and get around the law by not recording or deleting official informatio­n.

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