The good people of Australia MUST know that the government has been collecting and storing their data for quite some time, where only now (Good Friday, 2017) the law has caught up and been officially implemented.
Police commit many criminal actions against the general populous daily, and with regards to privacy breaches the numbers are staggering where they are hidden from the masses and for very good reasons.
ONLY one case has made it out into the public eye
regarding a journalist having privacy breached with regards to the new metadata
laws.
The people in government write laws where if a member of
the public commits a 'criminal' offence the people in government obtain a financial
remedy.
Since this journalist is a VICTIM of criminal actions by
police, the new metadata laws must contain a remedy for the victim within the
act, as they do for government bodies..
UNLESS of course the people in government who have written
the laws regard the good people of Australia as slaves or enemies of the state.
Let's see what 'remedy' the journalist obtains being the
victim of police criminal actions.
This is what smh.com.au wrote on 28 April 2017 under the
headline:
Police illegally obtained journalist's phone records
under new metadata retention regime
The Australian Federal Police illegally obtained a
journalist's phone records under the Turnbull government's new metadata
retention regime, the agency announced on Friday.
The breach took place as part of an investigation into a
leak of confidential police material - and the incident will now be
investigated by the Commonwealth Ombudsman.
AFP commissioner Andrew Colvin said the
police officers investigating the leak did not realise they were required to
obtain a warrant to access the journalist's metadata.
"This was human error. It should not have occurred.
The AFP takes it very seriously and we take full responsibility for breaching
the Act," Mr Colvin said.
AFP commissioner Andrew Colvin. Photo:
Alex Ellinghausen
"There was no ill will or
malice or bad intent by the officers involved who breached the Act. But simply
it was a mistake."
The journalist in question had not
been informed their data had been accessed, Mr Colvin said, due to
sensitivities around the ongoing investigation into the leak.
The
breach occurred "earlier this year" and was reported to the Ombudsman
on Wednesday.
Under the
revised data retention regime, police are required to obtain a warrant from a
judge to seek metadata from a journalist.
"The
vulnerability is the investigator needs to understand that that's their
requirement," Mr Colvin said on Friday. "On this occasion, the
investigator didn't."
The phone
records in question were relevant to the investigation, Mr Colvin said, but
"what was improper was that the right steps weren't taken to gain access
to it".
The
breach is the first such incident that has come to light under the government's
new metadata retention regime, which requires service providers to
store their customers' data for two years.
Acknowledging
the policy was "controversial", Mr Colvin said Australians
should nonetheless have "full confidence" in both the police and the
policy.
He
conceded the AFP's internal procedures had not anticipated and prevented the
error and therefore those practices would be subject to "significant
changes".
Access to
metadata would now be restricted to more senior officers, he said, and the
number of officers who can approve access to metadata will be reduced.
Training will also be bolstered.
Asked if
the unlawfully-obtained phone records would still be relied on to inform
the actions of investigators, he acknowledged that once seen it could not be
unseen.
"Clearly
they can't unsee it. They'll need to consider ... what weight they
put on what they saw," Mr Colvin said. "But that material was
accessed illegally, so it can have no bearing on the conduct of the
investigation."
He
stressed the content of the journalist's phone calls were not accessed, just
the call records. But Paul Murphy, chief executive of the Media,
Entertainment and Arts Alliance, said that was not a mitigating factor.
"It's
another demonstration that the AFP do not understand the sensitivities here,
the vital importance of protecting journalists' confidential sources," he
said. "It's an absolute disgrace."
South
Australian senator Nick Xenophon, who lobbied for extra safeguards for
journalists when the laws were formulated, said he was "furious"
about the revelation and would seek further amendments to the law.
"This
is outrageous. There's been a flagrant breach of the law here," he said.
"The safeguards have been completely trashed. This should chill the spine
of every journalist in this country."