10 years jail for false ID

R. A. Hettinga rah at shipwright.com
Mon Apr 26 17:49:26 PDT 2004


<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/25/blunkett_id_fraud_penalties/print.html>

The Register


 Biting the hand that feeds IT

 The Register ; Security ; Identity ;

 Original URL:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/25/blunkett_id_fraud_penalties/

10 years jail for false ID - Blunkett PR deploys rattle of shackles
By John Lettice (john.lettice at theregister.co.uk)
Published Sunday 25th April 2004 10:27 GMT

UK Home Secretary David Blunkett is set to publish his draft national
identity card bill, and according to weekend reports is expected to
announce a new offence of possession of a false document, maximum penalty
ten years in prison, as he does so. This plugs a major hole in UK law, we
are told by the public prints, because "It is currently not an offence to
possess a false document unless it has been used in the commission of
another crime" (The Guardian
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardianpolitics/story/0,3605,1202359,00.html))

The Graun goes on to tell us: "Ministers believe it will make it easier for
the police to catch criminals at an earlier stage. Someone found at an
airport with a suitcase full of forged passports could be prosecuted for
that alone", and other papers take a similar line (e.g. The Sun: "Under
current laws, prosecutors have to prove those caught with false identity
papers were also planning or had committed other crimes.") But exorcise any
images you were getting of some weird liberal la-la land where kindly
bobbies hand back your fake passport to you, and customs officials close
your suitcase full of false passports and wave you through with a cheery
smile, because it's not true.

A cursory study of the facts leads one almost inescapably to the conclusion
that the 'ten years for ID fraud' headlines are being deployed to help
Blunkett present a tough on ID fraud, tough on immigration stance in order
to improve the reception of his ID bill on Monday.

The current position is as follows. If you arrive at Heathrow with a
suitcase full of false passports, you will be charged with Having a False
Instrument, contrary to Section 5(2) of the Forgery and Counterfeiting Act
1981 (example
(http://www.nationalcrimesquad.police.uk/Hot_off_the_press/2003/may/56.html)).
Or if you're caught running a passport factory, you will be charged with
conspiracy to make forged instruments (example
(http://www.nationalcrimesquad.police.uk/Hot_off_the_press/2003/july/85.html)).
Penalties are not what you'd call trivial - in our second example, the
organiser received five years in prison plus the threat of another three if
he did not pay the authorities #200,000. Defendants were (as is usual in
these case, subject to a confiscation hearing to identify and seize any
ill-gotten gains.

The position as regards individuals holding false documentation is
particularly interesting, because this is our second draconian crackdown in
ten months. Prior to the Criminal Justice Act 2003 fraudulently obtaining a
passport was dealt with under the Theft Act 1968, but one problem perceived
with this was that although high penalties were available, loss tended to
be equated with the value of the document, rather than the potential use to
which the document could be put. Provisions increasing the penalty for
falsely obtaining a passport or driving licence to a maximum of two years
prison came into effect on 29h January 2004 (Home Office circular
(http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/docs3/hoc0704.html)). And when the late
Beverley Hughes, a Home Office minister at the time, announced the change
at the Combating Identity Fraud Conference in London in June last year, she
said: "The new offence will make it much easier and swifter for police to
arrest criminals for identity theft as they will be able to arrest the
criminals for just possessing fake or stolen documents" (Home Office press
release*
(http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:8G84gJe8OVEJ:www.homeoffice.gov.uk/n_story.asp%3Fitem_id%3D508+beverley+hughes+linked+crimes+conviction&hl=en)).

Much useful information on the related issues of illegal immigration and
people trafficking is available from the Metropolitan Police Authority,
which reports that "as the Home Office have become more concerned about
immigration and introduced more controls, so the opportunities for serious
and organised criminals to profit from would-be migrants by providing them
with fraudulently obtained, forged or stolen travel documentation, or
secure means of transportation across borders, have increased" (performance
report, 8th May 2003
(http://www.mpa.gov.uk/committees/ppr/2003/030508/09.htm)). The MPA says
that numbers trafficked "rather than facilitated" are relatively small,
that London is the principal target for organised crime and illegal
immigration, and that 75 per cent of failed asylum seekers live in London.

Joint operations with the Immigration Service had a target of the removal
of 350 failed asylum seekers per month last May, and it was intended to
ramp this to 800 a month by March 2004. Actions supporting this ramp
include "a 'walk up' at identified locations throughout London with a focus
that includes car washes and other similar activity." So clearly, even
under the grotesquely inadequate laws of 2003, the police do not seem to
have been significantly impeded in their ability to spot-check ID and nick
people.

A more recent MPA report
(http://www.mpa.gov.uk/committees/ppr/2004/040212/11.htm) gives an
indication of what happens to people carrying false ID, and indicates what
the Home Office is doing to in the fight against organised crime (er, it's
impeding it). Says the report: "It is evident, though, that UKIS and UKPS
[Immigration Service and Passport Service respectively] are working to a
different set of objectives to Operation MAXIM [the Met task force dealing
with organised immigration-related crime]. From an enforcement perspective,
UKIS is focused on meeting Government targets for removals and... considers
identifying and tackling organised immigration crime networks as a
secondary issue, potentially best addressed by police resources."

So in chasing their failed asylum removal targets, IKIS and UKPS are
whipping detainees out of the country so fast that police chances of
tracking the origins of their false documentation are substantially
reduced. The report continues: "This is leading to a number of missed
opportunities where linked offences, such as forged passports coming from
the same source, are not being followed up, because the focus is on
removing the holder of the forged passport and not expanding the
investigation to include identifying the network that supplied it and
others in the series."

So shall we recap? We will have a new, stiffer penalty for an offence that
gained a new, stiffer penalty just last year. A large proportion of those
caught carrying false ID will, as previously, be swiftly ejected from the
country, and will therefore not be going to prison anyway. The Metropolitan
Police is meanwhile is "negotiating" with the Immigration Service in order
to agree procedures that will give it data on false identity documents that
will actually stand up in court. Should UKIS be able to tear itself away
from its Home Office targets for long enough to do this, then the police
will be rather better equipped to target organised crime's production of
false identity documents. .

* Our apologies for the Google cache link. At time of writing great swathes
of the UK government's documentation, including select committee reports,
had been offline for several days. As the provision of information to the
citizenry is merely a key component of the democratic process in the
electronic age, we accept that this probably doesn't count as
mission-critical.

Related stories:

UK public wants ID cards, and thinks we'll screw up the IT
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/22/id_cards/)
Fingerprints as ID - good, bad, ugly?
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/19/biometrics/)
Draft ID card Bill one month away - Blunkett
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/07/id_cards/)

) Copyright 2004


-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah at ibuc.com>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'





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