The UK visas agency has identified a
number of suspected criminals overseas by cross matching its new biometric
database of visa applicants with older police databases.
Among those identified in the cross matching scheme – which has been running
for two months – are two applicants in Vietnam whose fingerprints matched those
found on a crime scene over 20 years ago, while a UK rape suspect was recently
arrested in Australia.
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"As well as those wanted for questioning, there are people who are
immigration compliant who may have a criminal record who obviously we want to
keep out," said Mark Sedwill, international director of the
UK Border Agency.
In exceptional circumstances an applicant wanted for a crime in the UK will
be granted a visa so they can be arrested at the border, though this presents
difficulties as the person's point of arrival can't be guaranteed.
More often police in the applicant's country will be notified as in the case
of the man arrested in Australia.
The scheme is complicated as information held on IAFS – UK Visa's database –
is of a high quality, while information held on IDENT1 – the police database –
is less "clean" and sometimes contains only latent or partial fingerprints.
The visa application centres are run in a number of overseas locations by
suppliers CSC and
VFS global.
Once biometric details are collected from these centres they are transferred
to the UK and stored on a series of databases, before being checked against
police records.
The agency has already taken the sets of over two million visa applicants who
want to come to the UK.
Measures passed in the
Serious
Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 enable "data mining" – the cross
matching of databases – an increasingly common practice in law enforcement. The
powers were extended in the
Serious Crime
Act passed last year.
The practice will be among a number examined in the
Data Sharing
Review, being conducted by Mark Walport, director of the
Wellcome Trust, and information
commissioner Richard Thomas, and due later this year.
"These measures really need to be going through a necessity and
proportionality test before they are introduced," said Peter Sommer, security
expert at the London School of Economics.
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