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YOUR LETTERS
 
Edging ever closer to a police state

• In the context of recent oppressive government legislation concerning ID cards and terrorism, which alters the time honoured relationship between the private citizen and the state, I think your readers
should be made aware of what is already happening.
I recently received a letter addressed personally to me, apparently from an official at the Home Office, informing me that my details had been passed on to them by them by “a car park attendant or local warden”, because I had “left some belongings on view” in my car.
As a law-abiding citizen I found it quite shocking to find I had been reported in this way. It was signed by a Mike Wear, Chairman of the Vehicle Crime Reduction Team, but contained no address or means of identifying the sender other than telling me I could apply to the Home Office for more information. It also mentioned, as a postscript, that the letter is endorsed by Camden Council.
I wrote to the Home office and to Camden Council informing them that I regard this as a gross intrusion by the state into my privacy, and asking under what legislation wardens have been given powers to spy on and ‘report’ private citizens who have committed no offence. Their replies wax large with bureaucratic jargon about targets, initiatives and partnerships but ignore the fundamental questions I had asked. Most disturbing of all, the Camden official simply informed me that: “I have instructed a civilian worker to undertake this work with the backing of the council and our police partners”.
When public servants in a democracy can so exceed their authority as to put law-abiding citizens under arbitrary surveillance, do not apparently understand that legal sanction should be required for such action, and fail to answer legitimate questions about it, we are close to a police state. In response to my query as to whether I am now on a list of potential wrongdoers who will be watched in future, Camden replied that: “All information is then destroyed.” The Home Office claims that it “does not have access to this personal information and do not receive details of who letters have been sent to.” In the absence of any proper explanation of the legal basis for this action, why should I believe them?
Is leaving something on display in one’s car now a reportable offence? Are wardens now government agents with authority to conduct routine surveillance on the activities of law abiding private citizens? What else have they been instructed to spy on?
Camden’s reply warns me that: “Leaving something in a car is, in our opinion, as good as welcoming thieves to break in and take it.”
Is the next logical step, therefore, to order me not to leave furniture lying around in my house in case a potential thief peers through my windows and is provoked to break in? Why not just lock us all up straight away – think how much time and money that would save!
Their resources should be properly employed in legitimate inquiries to track down law-breakers, not harassing law-abiding citizens.
If this is the kind of attitude that now prevails in government circles I believe our civil rights are in grave danger.
Helen Marcus
Glenilla Road
NW3
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