The chief constable apologises after the identities of thousands of officers are mistakenly revealed.
Northern Ireland’s police chief has said he is “deeply sorry” about two “industrial-scale” breaches of internal data, revealing the identities of thousands of his officers and staff.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) mistakenly shared details about 10,000 of its employees on Tuesday.
Details of a second data breach emerged less than 24 hours later.
Hundreds of police officers have told their bosses that they are worried about their safety after the incidents.
The breaches have caused shock among officers, many of whom try not to reveal their occupation to people, including their friends and family, due to security reasons.
In the most recent major attack in February, an off-duty senior detective suffered life-changing injuries after being shot several times by dissident republican paramilitaries.
Chief Constable Simon Byrne said he had spoken to his officers and staff and had realised that some were “anxious, frustrated and really, really angry”.
“You can only imagine the unconscionable horror as people start to realise that maybe a loved one is put in jeopardy by what they are seeing,” he said.
‘Unprecedented crisis’
Regarding a claim that dissident republicans had obtained the staff list, Mr Byrne said the PSNI had “not been able to verify the substance behind that”.
He said he would not resign amid the crisis and offered an apology from himself and his senior team.
“Leadership is not about walking away – it’s facing up to responsibility,” he said.
“We need consistency and calm heads to lead us through an unprecedented crisis.”
Morale within the PSNI is at rock bottom and one big, immediate job for Simon Byrne is restoring his officers’ trust in the force.
But the problems don’t end there.
Law firms are already making it known that they will represent officers and civilian staff who have had their identities revealed in these data breaches.
With more than 10,000 people affected, the potential bill for compensation could run to tens of millions of pounds.
That would be hugely problematic not just for the PSNI but the wider budget for public services in Northern Ireland.
Mr Byrne was speaking after facing questions in an emergency meeting of the body overseeing policing in Northern Ireland.
He returned early from a holiday for the behind-closed-doors meeting on Thursday.
In a press conference after the meeting he acknowledged that the PSNI could face a financial hit if it was required to update its data systems, pay compensation or face a fine from the Information Commissioner’s Office.
The chief constable confirmed that no officers had been moved from their homes due to safety concerns after the data breaches.
But he said that the force was assessing whether some specialist officers should be redeployed “away from their usual place of work to a new location”.
Security advice updated
The Police Federation, a union representing rank-and-file officers, said “several hundred” officers had already told to their managers that they were “concerned and worried as a result of what has happened”.
In the biggest data breach, described as “monumental” by the union, information about every PSNI officer and civilian employee was mistakenly published in response to a Freedom of Information request.
The information appeared online for three hours on Tuesday and led to the PSNI updating security advice to its officers and staff.
The surname and first initial of every employee, their rank or grade, where they are based and the unit they work in, including sensitive areas such as surveillance and intelligence, were included.
Information about the second data breach, involving the theft of a spreadsheet with the names of 200 officers and staff, emerged on Wednesday.
The PSNI said documents, along with a police-issue laptop and radio, were believed to have been stolen from a private vehicle in Newtownabbey, County Antrim, on 6 July.
The police have since confirmed that they were able to remotely wipe both of these devices and are confident that information on them would not be accessible by a third party.
‘Very Alarming’
Alliance assembly member Nuala McAllister described Thursday’s meeting of the Northern Ireland Policing Board, which oversees the PSNI, as “long and intense” but said that some questions still remain as to how the data breaches were allowed to happen.
Policing Board member Mark H Durkan said the claim that dissident republicans have information on police officers in the wake of the breaches is “very alarming” and “sadly inevitable”.
The Ulster Unionist Party’s Mike Nesbitt said some clarity was provided on how the data breach came about, saying it was partly a systemic error and partly human error in that a number of people saw the data before it was published.
Sinn Féin assembly member Gerry Kelly said the Policing Board made the point “forcefully” that the PSNI must now work to assess the differing levels of risk faced by individual officers.
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