[But we don't know who they are!   --gnu]

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/08/11/ripa_iii_figures/

Two convicted for refusal to decrypt data
Up to five years in jail after landmark prosecutions

By Chris Williams

Posted in Policing, 11th August 2009 13:17 GMT

Two people have been successfully prosecuted for refusing to provide 
authorities with their encryption keys, resulting in landmark convictions that 
may have carried jail sentences of up to five years.

The government said today it does not know their fate.

The power to force people to unscramble their data was granted to authorities 
in October 2007. Between 1 April, 2008 and 31 March this year the first two 
convictions were obtained.

The disclosure was made by Sir Christopher Rose, the government's Chief 
Surveillance Commissioner, in his recent annual report.

The former High Court judge did not provide details of the crimes being 
investigated in the case of either individual - neither of whom were 
necessarily suspects - nor of the sentences they received.

The Crown Prosecution Service said it was unable to track down information on 
the legal milestones without the defendants' names.

Failure to comply with a section 49 notice carries a sentence of up to two 
years jail plus fines. Failure to comply during a national security 
investigation carries up to five years jail.

Sir Christopher reported that all of the 15 section 49 notices served over the 
year - including the two that resulted in convictions - were in "counter 
terrorism, child indecency and domestic extremism" cases.

The Register has established that the woman served with the first section 49 
notice, as part of an animal rights extremism investigation, was not one of 
those convicted for failing to comply. She was later convicted and jailed on 
blackmail charges.

Of the 15 individuals served, 11 did not comply with the notices. Of the 11, 
seven were charged and two convicted. Sir Christopher did not report whether 
prosecutions failed or are pending against the five charged but not convicted 
in the period covered by his report.

To obtain a section 49 notice, police forces must first apply to the National 
Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC). Although its web presence suggests NTAC is 
part of the Home Office's Office of Security and Counter Terrorism, it is in 
fact located at the government's secretive Cheltenham code breaking centre, 
GCHQ.

GCHQ didn't immediately respond to a request for further information on the 
convictions. The Home Office said NTAC does not know the outcomes of the 
notices it approves.

NTAC approved a total of 26 applications for a section 49 notice during the 
period covered by the Chief Surveillance Commissioner's report, which does not 
say if any applications were refused. The judicial permission necessary to 
serve the notices was then sought in 17 cases. Judges did not refuse permission 
in any case.

One police force obtained and served a section 49 notice without NTAC approval 
while acting on "incorrect information from the Police National Legal 
Database", according to Sir Christopher. The action was dropped before it 
reached court.

Readers with further information about the convictions can contact the reporter 
in confidence here.

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