Pseudonymising Criminal Witness Statements – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per Criminal Procedure Rules
Criminal witness statements contain the detailed personal accounts of witnesses and victims, including their names, addresses, contact details, and the personal circumstances surrounding the offence. anonym.legal pseudonymises these identifiers across witness-statement bundles, allowing criminal-law trainers, supervision solicitors, and case-review bodies to engage with the evidential content without retaining real witness personal data.
When this applies
This task applies when witness statements are used in criminal-law training exercises, legal-aid supervision audits, or case review, and the users require the substantive evidential content but have no legitimate basis to retain the witnesses' or victims' personal identifiers.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the witness statement or statement bundle (PDF or DOCX).
- The engine identifies the witness's name, address, date of birth, and contact details in the statement header and body.
- Personal identifiers of the witness, any named victims, and any co-witnesses mentioned in the statement are pseudonymised consistently.
- The factual account, exhibit references, and declaration wording are preserved in clear text.
- A reversible mapping table is produced with UK data residency.
- The pseudonymised statements are released for training or review use.
What you provide
- Witness statement or statement bundle (all parts)
- Exhibit list (to preserve exhibit references in pseudonymised form)
Limitations & cautions
- Witness statements in live proceedings are subject to Criminal Procedure Rules disclosure obligations — ensure any use of pseudonymised versions is consistent with those obligations and with any court-imposed restrictions.
- Victim personal statements carry additional sensitivity; apply careful judgement to sharing decisions even for pseudonymised versions.
FAQ
Are victim personal statements handled differently from other witness statements?
Victim personal statements are processed using the same pseudonymisation framework. Their additional emotional and personal content means pseudonymised versions should be shared only within a strictly limited training cohort.
Can pseudonymised witness statements be used in legal-aid supervision assessments?
Yes. Legal-aid supervision assessments evaluating the quality of case preparation may use pseudonymised witness statements, provided the supervisors do not require the witnesses' real identities to assess the quality of the legal work.
Does the tool detect addresses embedded mid-statement as well as in statement headers?
Yes. Addresses and personal identifiers appearing in the narrative body of a statement — as well as in the formal header — are detected and pseudonymised.