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Considerations on the UK re-arrest hazard data analysis: how model selection can alter conclusions for policy development

Date
2011
Abstract
At time of writing, the policy of DNA profile retention for Constabularies within England and Wales is determined by the Association of Chief Police Officer’s (ACPO) 2006 Retention Guidelines for Nominal Records on the Police National Computer (PNC), which was developed following the passing of the Criminal and Police Act 2001 and the Criminal Justice Act 2003. The former of these legislations ended the requirement for Constabularies to destroy DNA records relating to persons acquitted or who had their case discontinued, whilst the latter extended powers so as to permit the taking of DNA records without consent from any individual arrested for a recordable offence. These Retention Guidelines detail a governing principle that all records held on the PNC should be maintained until the person in question reaches 100 years of age, regardless of status of conviction, caution, acquittal, or No Further Action (NFA). As such, by 2010 there were over 5 million persons with profiles on the UK National DNA database, with approximately 1 million of these having no record of conviction or caution.
Supervisor
Description
peer-reviewed
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
Law, Probability and Risk;10(4), pp. 303-327
Funding code
Funding Information
STATICA, Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Sustainable Development Goals
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