Anonymising Acquittal and No-Further-Action Records – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per UK GDPR Art. 10
Acquittal notices and no-further-action (NFA) correspondence confirm that charges were not proceeded with or that the defendant was found not guilty, but they still carry personal data classified as criminal-offence data under UK GDPR Art. 10. anonym.legal pseudonymises the subject's personal identifiers in these records, allowing legal advisers and employers to confirm the absence of a conviction without retaining unnecessary personal data.
When this applies
This task applies when acquittal notices, NFA letters, or discontinuance documents are reviewed by employers, licensing authorities, or legal advisers who need to verify that a criminal matter did not result in a conviction, and those reviewers have no legitimate need to retain the subject's personal identifiers.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the acquittal notice, NFA letter, or discontinuance document.
- The engine identifies the subject's name, date of birth, address, and case reference number.
- Personal identifiers are pseudonymised; the charge description, court or force reference, and outcome statement (acquittal or NFA) are preserved.
- The outcome date and issuing authority are preserved to confirm authenticity context.
- A reversible mapping table is produced with UK data residency.
- The pseudonymised document is released for review; the original is restored if the real identity must be confirmed to a third party.
What you provide
- Acquittal notice or NFA correspondence
- Any related charge sheet or summons document (to provide offence context)
Limitations & cautions
- An acquittal or NFA does not erase the underlying arrest record or intelligence markers on the PNC; the tool pseudonymises personal identifiers in the acquittal document but does not affect PNC data held separately.
- UK GDPR Art. 10 applies to personal data relating to criminal convictions and offences — ensure the pseudonymised version is used only for permitted review purposes.
FAQ
Does an acquittal or NFA outcome appear on a DBS certificate?
Acquittals and NFA outcomes do not appear as convictions on DBS Standard certificates. They may be referenced in the police suitability information on DBS Enhanced certificates in exceptional circumstances — the pseudonymised document allows scope assessment without identity disclosure.
Can an employer ask about acquittals or NFA outcomes?
In general, the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 framework applies to convictions; acquittals and NFAs are not convictions. However, employers in some regulated sectors may receive this information via enhanced DBS disclosure — seek legal advice on the applicable obligations.
Is an NFA letter personal data under UK GDPR Art. 10?
Yes. Data relating to criminal offences — including charges that did not result in a conviction — is treated as criminal-offence data under UK GDPR Art. 10 and requires appropriate handling. anonym.legal's pseudonymisation satisfies the data-minimisation obligation for review purposes.