This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk_politics/7608155.stm

The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Data loss firm contract axed Data loss firm contract axed
(20 minutes later)
A company blamed for losing the details of thousands of criminals held on a computer memory stick has had its £1,5m contract terminated after an inquiry. A company blamed for losing the details of thousands of criminals held on a computer memory stick has had its £1.5m contract terminated after an inquiry.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said PA Consulting had lost the data after it was transferred securely to the firm.Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said PA Consulting had lost the data after it was transferred securely to the firm.
This was a "clear breach" of its contract, she told MPs. This was a "clear breach" of its contract, she said in a statement.
The work had now been taken in-house and PA Consulting's other government contracts, worth £8m, are under review along with that of other firms. The work had now been taken in-house and PA Consulting's other Home Office contracts, worth £8m, were under review along with those of other firms.
The Cabinet Office will launch a review of all contracts signed by the government with private companies to ensure they were "appropriate", said Ms Smith.
"Our contract had stipulated the sort of security provisions that needed to be in place and that had not happened," added the home secretary.
"We are cancelling this contract and we are urgently reviewing the way in which PA Consulting are meeting the requirements of other contracts we have with them.
"Our investigation has demonstrated that while the information was transmitted in an appropriately secure way to PA Consulting and fed to a secure site, it was subsequently downloaded on to an insecure data stick and that data stick was then lost."
Unlocked drawer
She said the memory stick had not been encrypted or "managed properly" and had not been found despite extensive searches.
RECENT LOSSES Nov 2007: 25m people's child benefit details, held on two discsDec 2007: 7,685 Northern Ireland drivers' details Dec 2007: 3m learner drivers' details lost in USJan 2008: 600,000 people's details lost on Navy officer's stolen laptopJune 2008: Six laptops holding 20,000 patients' details stolen from hospitalJuly 2008: MoD reveals 658 laptops stolen in four years When financial data goes missingSend us your comments
A risk assessment was being carried out about the data that was missing, alongside the internal inquiry into what had happened, she said.
And no more information was being passed to the firm while the investigation continued and the government was "reviewing the terms of that contract and other contracts" with PA Consulting.
The memory stick contained un-encrypted details about 10,000 prolific offenders as well as names, dates of births and some release date of all 84,000 prisoners in England and Wales - and 33,000 records from the police national computer.
Cancelling the contract will not cost the taxpayer and any expenses incurred will have to be met by PA Consulting, she added.
The memory stick contained the details of 84,000 prisoners held in England and Wales.
The device also contained the names, addresses and dates of birth of 30,000 people with six or more convictions in the last year, as well as the names and dates of birth of 10,000 criminals regarded as prolific offenders, from the police national computer.
It also carried the initials of people on drug treatment programmes.
It was left in an unlocked drawer in an unsecured office at its offices in Victoria, central London.
The loss led to fears prisoners would attempt to claim compensation but Ms Smith reassured MPs that "appropriate measures are in place for individuals seeking information about the data held on them".
Critics say the mistake raises further doubts about the government's controversial ID card project, in which PA Consulting is involved.
Ms Smith said: "The inquiry that we have carried out ... suggests that the most likely thing to have happened was that the data stick was pilfered or lost.
"I think (PA Consulting) recognise that what they have done is against the terms of their contract."
At the weekend, it emerged that another private contractor, EDS, mislaid a computer disc carrying personal details of thousands of employees of the National Offender Management Service in July last year.