All Information Relating To My Arrest On The 08th May 2015

Response to this request is long overdue. By law, under all circumstances, Thames Valley Police and Crime Commissioner should have responded by now (details). You can complain by requesting an internal review.

Dear Thames Valley Police and Crime Commissioner,

Dear Sir or Madam,

Please Supply me all information held about me under the data procreation act 1998 relating to My arrest on the 8th of May 2015 at Guildford Crown court.

1. All information and documents held by police About my arrest on the 08th may 2015 .

2. All case papers relating to this arrest

3 All cctv recordings relating to this arrest

4.My interview cctv recording.

I would prefer to receive this information electronically, preferably as a data set, eg. in Excel, NOT as a PDF.

If the decision is made to withhold some of this data using exemptions in the Data Protection Act, please inform me of that fact and cite the exemptions used.

If some parts of this request are easier to answer than others, I would ask that you release the available data as soon as possible.

If you need any clarification then please do not hesitate to contact me. Under Section 16 it is your duty to provide advice and assistance and so I would expect you to contact me if you find this request unmanageable in any way.

It May be helpful for you to know that a request for information under the data protection act 1998 should be responded to with 40 working days.

Regards,

Thomas Moorehouse
([email address])

Yours faithfully,

Thomas moorehouse

Isa Bell, London UK left an annotation ()

Wrong place.

The Police & Crime Commissioner is the wrong organisation. You need TVP's Access to Information (or whatever they call themselves). For TVP's purposes, it is the same section as FOI.

The legal fee is £10, which they will want. TVP may try to be awkward and demand proof of your identity such as utility bill, passport, driving licence etc. - some think that is unnecessary especially as they already have your home address, DNA and mugshot - meaning not much doubt about your identity. They probably have gone through your mobile phone too.

You should also consider getting a Court Order for a copy of the relevant pages of the police officers' notebooks. To do anything useful with the information you definitely do need a very skilled (and most are not) solicitor - one who specialises in actions against the police.

Good Luck.

Isa.