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First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Dutton v Information Commissioner & Anor [2023] UKFTT 949 (GRC) (09 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2023/949.html Cite as: [2023] UKFTT 949 (GRC) |
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Case Reference: EA/2023/0330 |
General Regulatory Chamber
Information Rights
Heard on: 3 November 2023 |
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B e f o r e :
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IAN DUTTON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER (2) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF LINCONSHIRE POLICE |
Respondents |
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____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is struck out
Introduction
1. The "Plan" by which the Chief Constable (CC) put forward to the Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) that resulted in this January 2023 BBC Look North programme.
2. Any correspondence between the CC and the PCC since the time that the "Plan" was submitted.
3. Any explanation where the CC or the PCC demonstrated that there was 'no other option' than to cut PSCO numbers; whilst at the same time proposing the employment of 41 others.
the Lincolnshire Police and Crime Commissioner is allowing the Lincolnshire Chief Constable to run the Lincolnshire Police Force on a whim; and requires no written proof of any Plan that the Chief Constable thinks may improve the Lincolnshire Police.
The removal of 41 PCSO's also goes against the recommendation of the Home Office Select Committee "Policing for the Future" Sections 30 and 31.
There can seldom be absolute certainty that information relevant to a request does not remain undiscovered somewhere within a public authority's records. This is particularly the case with a large national organisation like the Environment Agency, whose records are inevitably spread across a number of departments in different locations. The Environment Agency properly conceded that it could not be certain that it holds no more information. However, it argued (and was supported in the argument by the Information Commissioner) that the test to be applied was not certainty but the balance of probabilities. This is the normal standard of proof and clearly applies to Appeals before this Tribunal in which the Information Commissioner's findings of fact are reviewed. We think that its application requires us to consider a number of factors including the quality of the public authority's initial analysis of the request. the scope of the search that it decided to make on the basis of that analysis and the rigour and efficiency with which the search was then conducted. Other matters may affect our assessment at each stage, including, for example, the discovery of materials elsewhere whose existence or content point to the existence of further information within the public authority which had not been brought to light. Our task is to decide, on the basis of our review of all of these factors, whether the public authority is likely to be holding relevant information beyond that which has already been disclosed.
As a general principle, the IC was, in the Tribunal's view, entitled to accept the word of the public authority and not to investigate further in circumstances, whether there was no evidence as to an inadequate search, any reluctance to carry out a proper search or as to a motive to withhold information actually in its possession. Were this to be otherwise the IC, with its limited resources and its national remit, would be required to carry out a full scale investigation, possibly onsite, in every case in which a public authority is simply not believed by a requester.