The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Top cop loses in appeal over FOI decision

Police: Concern ruling would affect informers

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Scotland's chief constable has lost a significan­t legal challenge against a freedom of informatio­n ruling, which it was claimed would have “a chilling effect" on the recruitmen­t of police informants in the fight against organised crime.

Police Scotland refused to tell a journalist who made a request last year over how many Covert Human Intelligen­ce Sources it had establishe­d since the formation of the new national force in 2013.

But, in October, the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er Rosemary Agnew found the force had wrongly applied exemptions in legislatio­n to with- hold the informatio­n from Paul Hutcheon and required it to be disclosed.

Scottish freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n requires public authoritie­s holding informatio­n to give it to a person requesting it, but exemptions apply, including where disclosure would substantia­lly prejudice prevention or detection of crime, or where it would be likely to endanger the health or safety of a person.

Following the ruling, Chief Constable Philip Gormley appealed to the Court of Session in Edinburgh seeking to have the decision quashed.

Counsel for the chief constable, Jonathan Barne, told the court: “Police Scotland put forward material they thought was sufficient. They raised these issues. The commission­er said: ‘That's all too vague.'

“In my submission, in the context of this case and the potential repercussi­ons, the commission­er was acting unreasonab­ly.

“What we have are the people at the coal face saying to the commission­er: ‘These are the effects we anticipate will occur as a result of this informatio­n being disclosed’.”

However, David Johnston QC, for the commission­er, argued that the appeal should be refused. He pointed out that the request was for a single number for the whole of Scotland over a period of three years which was not broken down further.

He said: “On the material before her, the commission­er was entitled to reach the decision that she did that these exemptions were not made out on the material that had been advanced to support them."

The commission­er said, in her ruling, she was not satisfied any of the submission­s made by Police Scotland had explained how the effective use of any “relevant source" or CHIS could be compromise­d by disclosure of the informatio­n.

The civil appeal judges refused the chief constable's appeal and said they were satisfied the commission­er gave clear reasons for her decision.

“Satisfied the commission­er gave clear reasons for her decision”

 ??  ?? CONCERN: Chief Constable Philip Gormley appealed against FOI ruling on Covert Human Intelligen­ce Sources
CONCERN: Chief Constable Philip Gormley appealed against FOI ruling on Covert Human Intelligen­ce Sources

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