Westcliff PCSO used photo of woman from police computer (From Southend Standard)
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Westcliff PCSO used photo of woman from police computer
9:30am Wednesday 26th September 2012 in News By Paul Hannah
A POLICE community support officer is facing the sack for using the force computer to find a photograph of a woman bus driver.
Bernard Iley downloaded the photo of the former friend to his mobile and used it, so when the woman called him, the photo would pop up.
But a court heard the officer did not have permission to use the photo and was suspended when his bosses found out.
Chelmsford Crown Court also heard the woman in the picture is no longer in a friendship with Iley.
The 56-year-old was told by a judge he had committed an “extremely bad error of judgment” when he took the photo from police files.
Judge David Turner QC told Iley: “When you did this, you entered the forbidden zone and it has had the gravest of consequences. You have brought shame on yourself and derailed your career.”
Iley worked as a PCSO for Rochford district. He has been suspended on pay of £1,500 a month since March, but the court heard he is now almost certain to lose his job.
He admitted a charge of obtaining personal information without permission when he appeared in court.
Judge Turner fined him £1,000 plus £1,000 costs.
The court heard Iley, of Cheddar Avenue, Westcliff , had been a PCSO since 2003 and got on friendly terms with the woman bus driver from the Southend area.
It was at this time, between January 2011 and February this year, Iley found the picture of the woman, Stephen Rose, prosecuting, said.
The matter came to light and father-of-five Iley was suspended in March. His barrister, Alexis Dite, told the court: “The real consequence of this is he will lose his job.
“He put the picture on his contacts list and accepts it was not used for a legitimate reasons.
“He had a friendship with this woman, but she did not want it to continue.”
The court heard Iley was a traffic warden in the Southend area for more than 20 years before becoming a community support officer.
An Essex Police spokesman said: “Professional standards will now look at commencing internal disciplinary proceedings.”
Comments(14)
ccd
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10:02am Wed 26 Sep 12
E-Types...
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10:13am Wed 26 Sep 12
Blind Haze
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10:26am Wed 26 Sep 12
thesouthendone
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10:43am Wed 26 Sep 12
Blind Haze wrote:As much as I think PCSOs are a complete waste of money (actual police would be better!) i couldn't agree more with this comment.
Bad error of judgement, but hardly crime of the century. A simple internal reprimand, made to delete the photo and increased IT security would have put this to bed. However, this man will lose his job after 9 years service and is fined £2,000 - seems exceptionally harsh when you see the 'punishment' handed out to the teenager who stole a moped and ran over a police officer.
It seems you get punished more for being in a position of trust and making a mistake (regardless of previous contributions to society) then you do for being a little scrote who's whole life is a mistake and never contributes!
Son of stropmag
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11:46am Wed 26 Sep 12
andy:)
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11:50am Wed 26 Sep 12
ccd
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11:57am Wed 26 Sep 12
Blind Haze wrote:The punishment certainly does seem to be too heavy for what was an error of judgement as you say. It could have been dealt with internally, as you say but it does depend on just how much training he got on the do's and don'ts of people's data.
Bad error of judgement, but hardly crime of the century. A simple internal reprimand, made to delete the photo and increased IT security would have put this to bed. However, this man will lose his job after 9 years service and is fined £2,000 - seems exceptionally harsh when you see the 'punishment' handed out to the teenager who stole a moped and ran over a police officer.
Camp Incontinent
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12:14pm Wed 26 Sep 12
E-Types...
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1:47pm Wed 26 Sep 12
CALL ME CLINT
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2:35pm Wed 26 Sep 12
E-Types... wrote:I believe that is the nature of a "secret file".
He accessed a network of secret files that is restricted to only those with authority to access! That seems to be the crime not the photo of a woman's mugshot..
Blind Haze
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2:46pm Wed 26 Sep 12
ccd wrote:You're right, there may be more to this than the story says, perhaps he's been warned for similar offences previously. If not, it's a stark wake up call for the police as other maybe less trustworthy staff could download all sorts of very private information and give it to an 'interested party'. Either way, I think they should review their IT security policy and it seems that it's potentially open to a fair bit of abuse.
Blind Haze wrote: Bad error of judgement, but hardly crime of the century. A simple internal reprimand, made to delete the photo and increased IT security would have put this to bed. However, this man will lose his job after 9 years service and is fined £2,000 - seems exceptionally harsh when you see the 'punishment' handed out to the teenager who stole a moped and ran over a police officer.The punishment certainly does seem to be too heavy for what was an error of judgement as you say. It could have been dealt with internally, as you say but it does depend on just how much training he got on the do's and don'ts of people's data.
The above's obviously purely speculation and contemplation but there are a lot of unscrupulous people working in all industries.
E-Types...
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3:16pm Wed 26 Sep 12
CALL ME CLINT wrote:He was then punished for accessing that confidential data without authority rather than or maybe as well as taking a woman's picture from it.
E-Types... wrote:I believe that is the nature of a "secret file".
He accessed a network of secret files that is restricted to only those with authority to access! That seems to be the crime not the photo of a woman's mugshot..
Breaking into bank is as much about breaking in as stealing whats in there.
boom2012
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5:43pm Wed 26 Sep 12
ccd says...
10:00am Wed 26 Sep 12