Anonymising Non-Molestation Order Applications – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per UK GDPR
Non-molestation order applications require the applicant's name, address, date of birth, and a detailed account of the respondent's abusive behaviour — highly sensitive personal data under UK GDPR. anonym.legal pseudonymises those identifiers — preserving the incident chronology, dates, and the relief sought — so the application can be reviewed without exposing the applicant's identity or address.
When this applies
This task applies when a non-molestation order application is reviewed by a legal-aid supervisor, a domestic abuse support specialist, or a welfare adviser who requires sight of the incident chronology and legal basis but must not have access to the applicant's address or identifying details for safety reasons.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the non-molestation order application (Form FL401) and any supporting witness statement.
- The engine identifies the applicant, respondent, and any named children or witnesses across all documents.
- Each individual receives a consistent pseudonym; importantly, the applicant's address is pseudonymised with particular care given the safety context.
- The incident chronology, dates, descriptions of behaviour, and relief sought are preserved in clear text.
- A reversible mapping table is produced with UK data residency; access to real addresses should be restricted on a strict need-to-know basis.
- Release the pseudonymised application for review; restore real identities and addresses only for court filing under the court's protected-address protocol.
What you provide
- Form FL401 non-molestation order application
- Supporting witness statement
- Any existing injunction or undertaking documents
Limitations & cautions
- In proceedings involving domestic abuse, address information must be handled under the court's protected-address regime — consult the court's confidential address protocol before any disclosure of re-identified documents.
- anonym.legal provides pseudonymisation for review purposes; decisions about safety planning and risk management must be made by qualified domestic abuse professionals.
- The court copy of the FL401 must bear the parties' real details — re-identify only for court filing, not for general distribution.
FAQ
Is the applicant's address pseudonymised when the court uses a protected-address scheme?
Yes. The applicant's address receives the same pseudonymisation as all other personal identifiers. The mapping table — which contains the real address — should only be accessed by the applicant's legal representative and the court under the protected-address protocol.
Can the pseudonymised application be shared with a domestic abuse support organisation?
A pseudonymised version is suitable for case-study review or welfare-adviser briefings. Any sharing with external organisations must comply with the court's disclosure orders and the applicant's safety plan.
Are the respondent's details also pseudonymised in the application?
Yes. The respondent's name, address, and personal details are pseudonymised. The pseudonymised version prevents any inadvertent disclosure of either party's details during the review process.
How does the tool handle exhibits (photographs, messages) attached to the application?
Text-based exhibits (e.g. printed message transcripts) are pseudonymised at the name level. Image files require manual review to redact visual identifiers before upload.