Ministry of Justice hit with £140K data breach fine

Email again

The Ministry of Justice has been hit with a 140,000 data breach fine after details about all the prisoners serving at a Welsh jail were emailed to several inmates' families.

The incident came to light in August 2011 after one of the recipients alerted HMP Cardiff about receiving a spreadsheet stating the names, ethnicities, addresses, sentence length and release date information about all 1,182 of the prison's inmates.

The document was attached to an email about a forthcoming visit, and also contained coded information about the offences the inmates had carried out.

These types of incidents are extremely rare but this does not mean that we are complacent.

An internal investigation into the incident also revealed the same error had occurred on two other occasions the previous month, with the details being forwarded on to two further families.

Neither of these incidents was reported at the time, and all three recipients were visited by the police and prison staff to ensure the information was deleted.

Even so, the Ministry of Justice has been ordered to pay a 140,000 fine by the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) for breaching the Data Protection Act.

The breach was reported to the ICO a month after the third breach took place, with an investigation by the data protection watchdog flagging several areas of concern regarding the organisation's approach to data handling.

For example, the investigation revealed unencrypted floppy disks were regularly used to transfer large volumes of data between prison networks, while a lack of audit trails means the disclosures would have gone unnoticed if the breach had not been reported in the first place.

David Smith, the deputy commissioner and director of data protection, said although the fallout from the breach was contained the leaked information could potentially have put the affected prisoners and their families at risk.

"The potential damage and distress that could have been caused by this serious data breach is obvious. Disclosing this information not only had the potential to put the prisoners at risk, but also risked the welfare of their families through the release of their home addresses," explained Smith.

"It is only due to the honesty of a member of the public that the disclosures were uncovered as early as they were and that it was still possible to contain the breach," he added.

In a statement to IT Pro, a Ministry of Justice spokesperson said the organisation takes information security "very seriously" and assured those concerned that it took "immediate steps" to recover the leaked data.

"These types of incidents are extremely rare but this does not mean that we are complacent," the statement continued.

"A thorough investigation was held by the prison who immediately altered their procedures, and further changes were implemented across the prison estate."

Caroline Donnelly is the news and analysis editor of IT Pro and its sister site Cloud Pro, and covers general news, as well as the storage, security, public sector, cloud and Microsoft beats. Caroline has been a member of the IT Pro/Cloud Pro team since March 2012, and has previously worked as a reporter at several B2B publications, including UK channel magazine CRN, and as features writer for local weekly newspaper, The Slough and Windsor Observer. She studied Medical Biochemistry at the University of Leicester and completed a Postgraduate Diploma in Magazine Journalism at PMA Training in 2006.