Hi All
This topic is very close to my heart. I've been on it for some years and have learnt a lot. Of course all this is personal experience and views of my own as I'm not legally qualified.
If you find your spent conviction published on a web site, there's a couple of things you can do:
1) You can ask Google to disable any searches for that site, so people can't find it. I did this and they responded surprisingly quicky. They remove any links/searches from their database. In my case, they disabled any searches for my name and that link. You can apply here:
https://support.google.com/legal/answer/10769224?hl=en-GB2) My experience, often of media organisations is they will just ignore you. So.... you tell them you want to request your Right To Erasure. It's explained on the Information Commission web site here:
https://ico.org.uk/for-the-public/your-right-to-get-your-data-deleted/So... you bang off your request and they have 1 month to respond. Being both stupid and arrogant, they probably won't even reply, but..... the data Protection Act gives a Data Controller (them) 1 month to reply. If they don't, you email them informing them of this and they are now in breach of the GDPR.
Of course, they might reply and just say 'get lost', but my experience is this wakes them up a little.
If you can, try and get the email address of the Data Protection Officer of the organisation you're dealing with. You can often find this on their privacy notice on their web site.
You can then make a complaint to the Information Commission for the breach. This is worth doing as it's only an email, but be prepared for the fact the ICO are pretty much useless, deserving of their score of about 1 on Trustpilot:
https://uk.trustpilot.com/review/ico.org.ukThis is the lowest score possible.
But all is not over, the DBS used to publish spent convictions. The Human Rights organisation, Liberty took the to court saying it was a breach of the Human Rights Act. Liberty won and the Judge said in his summing up:
as [the conviction] recedes into the past, it becomes a part of the person’s private life
usually be the point at which it becomes spent under the 1974 [ROA] Act
more info here:
https://inforrm.org/2017/02/02/spent-convictions-in-the-law-of-privacy-and-data-protection-part-1-aidan-wills/Next thing to do is quote this case and they will (hopefully) realise they have breached your human rights.
I did have a link to the actual case, but seem to have lost it. If somebody wants it, I'll try and find it again.
One thing I tried was the Unlock page which says that Carter Ruck solicitors would take on your case on a pro-bono basis.
My advice would be don't bother. It was quite the uphill struggle to get them to reply in the first instance and when I did engage and pushed them , they said they couldn't do it on a pro-bono basis and wanted £4.5K to collate info and write a letter. My view was that they REALLY weren't interested, but wish they had said so at the start, without raising my hopes and wasting my time.
I get a bit of a feel now for site owners that will/won't help. Typically they don't reply. After 2 weeks of my application to be forgotten, I send them a chaser reminding them they have 2 weeks left to respond.
I categorise sites as either 'helpful' or 'sticky'. The BBC being very sticky. It took a year of my time to get them to comply with the law. They hung onto this document like a dog with a bone. Not sure what made the penny drop, but simultaneously, I got my MP involved and threatened to sue them for Defamation with Malice. Defamation as the conviction was spent and Malice as the information was wrong. Somehow, they gained sentience and removed the document.
The total cost was a lot of my time and a packet of biscuits for my MP. Bargain! I think it also helped that I pointed out to my MP that the BBCs's Data Protection Officer was now in breach of the Data Protection Act. I'm guessing she didn't want that on her CV 😂
Sorry this is so long........
I documented the whole thing with the BBC, other sites and my experience with Carter Ruck and offered it to Unlock as a personal story. It was never published and have no idea if it was rejected etc as unlock have never come back to me despite chaser emails.
If anyone's interested I'll post it up here. It's a long read as it's a long story.
As mentioned I've dealt with a large number of websites publishing my spent conviction. Some have been very helpful. Some redacted the document quickly as requested and some simply deleted the offending section.
Oh, one last bit. If you think the web site owners are taking the PEE heavily and they might well be, stay polite ay all times, gently 'upping the anti' as you go.
Best of luck to you all.
Cheers
Steve