PSNI Hit by Second Data Breach in Just Days
Another Staggering Security Slip-Up
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) is reeling after yet another data breach. Just a day after a major leak exposed details of 10,000 officers and staff, sensitive documents on more than 200 serving members were stolen from a private vehicle in Newtownabbey.
What Went Down?
Assistant Chief Constable Chris Todd confirmed the theft happened on July 6. The stolen items included a police laptop, radio, and a spreadsheet listing personal details of over 200 officers and staff.
“The documents, along with a police issue laptop and radio, were believed to have been stolen from a private vehicle in the Newtownabbey area on July 6,”
“We have contacted the officers and staff concerned to make them aware of the incident, and an initial notification has been made to the Office of the Information Commissioner regarding the data breach.”
Mounting Fears Over PSNI Data Security
This new scandal piles on top of the earlier breach, where sensitive info was accidentally published in response to a Freedom of Information (FOI) request. That first leak revealed surnames, initials, ranks, work locations, and departments of all PSNI personnel – though thankfully did not include private addresses.
PSNI Scrambles to Contain Fallout
The police force has apologised and says it’s working with security partners to investigate both incidents fully. Concerns are rising sharply among officers and their families about the safeguarding of their private data.