14 Jan 2008
The UK government is considering implanting prisoners with RFID tags containing data on identity, address and criminal record.
The RFID tags, about the size of two grains of rice, would be injected under the skin and could be scanned by a reader.
There are also proposals to link the RFID tags to a larger GPS device to monitor the location of high risk prisoners.
"We have wanted to take advantage of this technology for several years because it seems a sensible solution to the problems we are facing in this area, " a senior minister told the Independent on Sunday.
"We have looked at it and gone back to it and worried about the practicalities and the ethics. But, when you look at the challenges facing the criminal justice system, its time has come."
The Ministry of Justice has confirmed that it is considering the proposal as part of plans to modernise the prison system.
Human rights groups have pounced on the proposal, however, describing it as "degrading".
Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, said: "If the Home Office does not understand why implanting a chip in someone is worse than an ankle bracelet, they do not need a human-rights lawyer they need a common-sense bypass.
"Degrading offenders in this way will do nothing for their rehabilitation and nothing for our safety, as some will inevitably find a way round this new technology."
The RFID proposals are designed to address problems with the existing tagging system which uses a transmitter strapped to the ankle.
Over 2,000 of the 17,000 offenders fitted with the ankle tags have escaped by tampering with, or simply cutting off, the device.
Curfew breaches for the past two years are up 283 per cent, and further
development of the system has been halted until these problems can be sorted
out.
Harry Fletcher, assistant general secretary of the
National
Association of Probation Officers, stated that the RFID proposal would be
unhelpful.
"This is the sort of daft idea that comes up from the department every now and then, but tagging people in the same way we tag our pets cannot be the way ahead," he said.
"Treating people like pieces of meat does not seem to represent an improvement in the system, which works well enough as it is.
"Knowing where offenders like paedophiles are does not mean you know what they are doing."
The UK has been moving faster than most in the use of RFID, including plans to tag exam papers.
Similar schemes in the US have been banned, and there are fears about the health risks and security of RFID implants.
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Do you agree?
Sick of leftys
"Knowing where offenders like paedophiles are does not mean you know what they are doing." - Maybe not, but you could hazard a guess if they've been pinged as hanging round your childs school / youth club.
Posted by: Toni's Dad 08 Jan 2009
FOR YOUR PROTECTION
Once fingerprinting was only for criminals and those who held high security clearances. Now that biometric is being used in elementary schools so they can take attendance on buses and keep track of lunch money accounts. Implanting RFID chips was once touted as a way to retrieve the lost family pet and to keep track of Alzheimer's patients who wandered away. Now they want to implant prisoners. The next step will inevitably be implantation in the general public for the "convenience and security" of not having to remember all your passwords and PINs (work, ATM, email, credit card, etc.) and to have your medical records with you at all times. The permanent tracking of individuals would be touted as a breakthrough for Homeland Security! Military applications (night vision, GPS, etc.) were once civilianized for consumers. Prison system applications will soon be be routine, mandated requirements for employment, banking and travel. FOR YOUR PROTECTION, of course!
Posted by: ITChief 04 Mar 2008
Do It..
I'm sorry but if your in prison, then you don't deserve any human rights. Murderers, rapists, robbers, muggers, none of these considered the human rights of their victims. So why should we care about their human rights. Tag them. It's easy enough to de-activate the tag at the end of the sentence.
Posted by: Neo 15 Jan 2008