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The Weekly Round-up: Discriminatory policing, online privacy and puberty blockers

In the news:

This week saw the Government’s controversial Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill undergo its second reading in the House of Lords. The proposed legislation, which would broaden police powers, enable the extraction of more information from mobile phones and impose harsher sentences for assaults on emergency workers, has drawn strong criticism for its predicted discriminatory impact.

Two provisions have attracted particular concern. First, the introduction of Serious Violence Reduction Orders (SVROs), which would authorise the police to stop and search people on account of their previous offending history without requiring ‘reasonable grounds’ to do so. Such discretionary powers are predicted to have a disproportionate effect on black people, given that police figures demonstrate they are already nine times more likely to be stopped and searched than white people. In an open letter published on Monday, criminal justice organisation Liberty said that the law ‘effectively creates an individualised, suspicionless stop and search power, entirely untethered to a specific and objectively verifiable threat’ and risks ‘compound[ing] discrimination’.

A number of human rights charities are also perturbed by the Bill’s criminalisation of ‘residing on land without consent in a vehicle’, a measure designed to target Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities.

In an equalities impact assessment published on Monday, the Government admitted that particular communities would be impacted in disproportionate ways, but argued that these effects would be ‘objectively justified’. It wrote, ‘There is no direct discrimination within the meaning of the Equality Act as the law will apply equally, regardless of any protected characteristic…any discriminatory impact for those of a particular race or ethnicity will be indirect.’ It said the plans represented a ‘proportionate means of achieving the legitimate aims of prevention and investigation of crime and the protection of the rights of others, notably those of the occupier and the local community.’

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