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A.K. v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 27570/15 • ECHR ID: 001-207265

Document date: November 30, 2020

  • Inbound citations: 0
  • Cited paragraphs: 0
  • Outbound citations: 3

A.K. v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 27570/15 • ECHR ID: 001-207265

Document date: November 30, 2020

Cited paragraphs only

Communicated on 30 November 2020 Published on 21 December 2020

THIRD SECTION

Application no. 27570/15 A.K. (anonymity has been granted) against Russia lodged on 8 May 2015

STATEMENT OF FACTS

THE FACTS

The applicant is a Russian national who lives in the Khanty- Mansiyskiy Autonomous Circuit- Yugra .

The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be summarised as follows.

In 2000 the Nizhnevartovsk Town Court, Tyumen Region, found the applicant guilty of hooliganism, a criminal offence punishable under Article 213 § 2 (a) of the Criminal Code and sentenced him to three years and six months ’ imprisonment. The Ministry of the Interior recorded the data relating to the applicant ’ s conviction and the sentence imposed in a special database.

On 8 June 2001 the applicant was released following the application of an Amnesty Act.

After a certain period, the applicant ’ s conviction became spent.

In 2011 the offence of which the applicant had been found guilty was decriminalised.

In June 2014 the Ministry of the Interior, at the applicant ’ s request, issued him with so-called certificate “on the existence/absence of convictions or the existence/absence of the fact of a criminal prosecution or the discontinuation of a criminal prosecution”, which contained information on his spent conviction (the date of conviction, the criminal offence for which he had been convicted, the sentence imposed, the name of the court which had convicted him) and the information on the Amnesty Act applied.

The applicant brought court proceedings against the Ministry of the Interior. He submitted that the processing of the data relating to his conviction by the ministry had been unlawful .

In August 2014 the Khanty- Mansiyskiy District Court of the Khanty ‑ Mansiyskiy Autonomous Circuit- Yugra dismissed the applicant ’ s complaint, having found that the Ministry of the Interior had the right to process the data relating to his conviction in accordance with section 17 of the Police Act (see “Relevant domestic law” below). The court observed that Ministry of Interior order no. 89 of 12 February 2014 determined that personal data relating to convictions could be stored in the police database until the individual concerned reached 80 years of age.

In November 2014 the Court of the Khanty- Mansiyskiy Autonomous Circuit- Yugra upheld that judgment on appeal, referring also to ministerial order no. 752 of 12 July 2000 and order no. 612 of 9 July 2007 and to the Personal Data Act (see “Relevant domestic law” below”).

In 2015 a judge of the Court of the Khanty- Mansiyskiy Autonomous Circuit- Yugra declined to refer an appeal on points of law lodged by the applicant to the Court of Cassation, finding that the processing of the data relating to the applicant ’ s conviction had been also based on Personal Data Act.

The applicant challenged in the Constitutional Court the compatibility with the Constitution of the Police Act.

In December 2015 the Constitutional Court declined to examine the applicant ’ s complaint on the merits.

Relevant domestic law and practice

A. Constitution of the Russian Federation of 12 December 1993

Article 24 of the Constitution provides that collecting, keeping, using and disseminating information about a person ’ s private life is not permitted without his or her consent.

B. Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (FZ-63 of 13 June 1996)

Article 86 § 1 of the Criminal Code provides that a person found guilty of a crime shall be deemed to be convicted from the date of the entry into force of the court ’ s sentence until such time as the conviction becomes spent or is lifted. The conviction is taken into account in the event of re-offending, and when sentencing. It also entails other legal consequences in cases and in accordance with orders provided for by federal laws. Article 86 § 2 provides that an individual who has been absolved from serving a sentence will be deemed not to have been convicted.

Article 86 § 3 provides a list of cases where conviction is deemed to have become spent:

(a) in respect of individuals who have received a suspended sentence – on expiry of the probation period;

(b) in respect of individuals sentenced to punishments which are more lenient than deprivation of liberty – on expiry of a one-year period after the sentence has been served, or the punishment enforced;

(c) in respect of individuals sentenced to deprivation of liberty for crimes of minor or average gravity – on expiry of a period of three years after the sentence has been served;

(d) in respect of individuals sentenced to deprivation of liberty for serious crimes – on expiry of a period of eight years after the sentence has been served;

(e) in respect of individuals sentenced to deprivation of liberty for particularly serious crimes – on expiry of a period of ten years after the sentence has been served.

Article 86 § 5 provides that in cases where an individual ’ s conduct after having served the sentence is irreproachable and the individual has compensated for the damage caused by the crime, a court may, at the request of that individual, lift his conviction before the expiry of the statutory period for the conviction to become spent.

Article 86 § 6 provides that after the conviction becomes spent or is lifted by the court, all the legal consequences entailed by the conviction will be annulled.

C. Personal Data Act (FZ-152 of 27 July 2006)

Section 5 lays down the principles of the processing of personal data. In particular, the processing of personal data should come to an end once specific and lawful aims, to be defined in advance, have been achieved. No processing of personal data must take place where it is incompatible with the aims of processing.

The storage of personal data should be carried out in a form which allows identification of the subject of the data for a period no longer than necessary for the achievement of the aims of processing, provided that the storage term is not defined by a federal law or a contract to which the subject of the data is a party, beneficiary or guarantor. Personal data subject to processing should be destroyed or anonymised once the aims pursued have been achieved or where it is no longer necessary to pursue those aims, unless a federal law provides otherwise.

Section 10(3) provides that the processing of personal data relating to convictions may be carried out by State or municipal authorities within the limits of their powers, but also by other individuals in cases and in accordance with orders established by law.

Section 10(4) provides that the processing of personal data relating to convictions should be stopped immediately if the reasons which led to the processing of such data have been eliminated, unless a federal law provides otherwise.

D. Police Act (FZ-3 of 7 February 2011)

Section 17(1) provides that the police have the right to process individuals ’ personal data as necessary for the fulfilment of their obligations, and subsequently to insert the received information into databases. The updating of databases is carried out in accordance with the requirements provided for in the legislation of the Russian Federation.

Section 17(3) provides a list of data to be inserted into databases. In particular, subparagraph 2 provides that data concerning “individuals convicted of a criminal offence” will be inserted in databases. Subparagraph 6 provides that information concerning “individuals in respect of whom an Amnesty Act has been applied before the entry into force of the sentence, absolving them from serving a sentence” will also be inserted into the databases.

Section 17(4) provides that the police must protect data contained in databases from illegal or accidental access, destruction, copying, dissemination or other unlawful actions.

Under section 17(5), information contained in databases may be provided to State authorities or their officials only in cases defined by federal law. It may be provided to law-enforcement authorities of foreign States and to international police organisations in accordance with international treaties to which the Russian Federation is a party.

Section 17(8) provides that personal data contained in databases must be destroyed once the aims pursued by their processing have been achieved or in cases where it is no longer necessary to pursue those aims.

E. Decree no. 248 of the President of the Russian Federation of 1 March 2011 on questions relating to the Ministry of the Interior of the Russian Federation

The decree approved the rules on the functioning (“the Statute”) of the Ministry of the Interior, which remained in force until 21 December 2016.

Article 13 § 8 of the Statute provided that the Ministry of the Interior had the right to establish and run, in accordance with the legislation of the Russian Federation, federal databases and, in particular, databases of criminal convictions.

F. Relevant orders of the Ministry of the Interior

The order approved the rules for the centralised registration of criminal cases and crimes.

Article 74 of the Rules (addendum to the order) establishes which information should be indicated in the certificate.

Paragraph 15.1 of the addendum provides that data concerning criminal convictions are stored regardless of whether the conviction has become spent or has been lifted.

Paragraph 15.2 provides that data on criminal convictions are stored until the individuals concerned reach the age of 80.

The order approved the “Rules on the processing of personal data within the system of the Ministry of the Interior – Addendum no. 1 to the order.

Article 1 of the Rules states that the Rules establish procedures aimed at finding and preventing breaches of domestic law in the sphere of personal data. They also establish the categories of person whose personal data are processed, the purpose of processing the data, the time-limits for processing and storage of data, and the procedure for the destruction of data once the purpose of the processing has been achieved or in other cases provided for by law.

Article 9 provides a list of categories of personal data which may be processed. Paragraph 27 provides that information on convictions, including spent and lifted convictions, may be processed.

Article 11 sets out a list of categories of person whose personal data may be processed. Paragraph 10 provides that data on persons convicted of a crime may be processed.

Chapter IV of the Rules is entitled “Time-limits for the processing and storage of personal data, procedure for their destruction once the aims of processing have been achieved or in other cases provided for by law”.

Article 12 provides that the time-limits for the processing and storage of personal data within the system of the Ministry of the Interior are defined in accordance with the legislation of the Russian Federation and statutory instruments of the Ministry of the Interior. If such time-limits are not specified by the legislation and statutory instruments of the Ministry of the Interior, personal data may not be processed and stored for longer than required in order to achieve the aims pursued by the processing and storage.

Article 15 provides that personal data must be destroyed once the aims of processing have been achieved or if there is no longer any need to pursue those aims.

Relevant Council of Europe texts

For a summary of relevant texts, see M.M. v. the United Kingdom (no. 24029/07 , § § 122-42, 13 November 2012).

COMPLAINT

The applicant complains under Article 8 of the Convention that the continued processing and, in particular, the storage by the Ministry of the Interior of the personal data relating to his criminal conviction after it had become spent are in breach of his right to respect for his private life. He contends that the domestic law governing the processing of personal data concerning criminal convictions is incompatible with the Convention since it does not provide for appropriate safeguards against arbitrary interference with his right to respect for private life

QUESTIONS TO THE PARTIES

1. On which date did the applicant ’ s criminal conviction become spent?

2. Has there been an interference with the applicant ’ s right to respect for his private life within the meaning of Article 8 § 1 of the Convention? In particular, did the Ministry of the Interior process the applicant ’ s personal data related to his criminal conviction, and continue processing those data after the applicant ’ s conviction had become spent?

3. If so, was that interference in accordance with the law (see M.M. v. the United Kingdom , no. 24029/07 , 13 November 2012), did it pursue one or more legitimate aims referred to in Article 8 § 2 of the Convention and was it necessary in terms of Article 8 § 2 (see Gardel v. France , no. 16428/05, §§ 60-70, ECHR 2009 ) ? In particular:

(a) Which provisions of domestic law govern the processing of personal data relating to criminal convictions, and, in particular, of data on spent convictions?

(b) Is the domestic law compatible with the rule of law, accessible and foreseeable as required by Article 8 of the Convention (see M.M. v. the United Kingdom , cited above §§ 191-207 )?

- Were all those provisions – in particular, Ministry of the Interior Orders nos. 752, 612 and 89 of 12 July 2000, 9 July 2007 and 12 February 2014 respectively – published in a generally accessible official publication ?

- Were the terms of the law governing the processing of personal data on criminal convictions sufficiently clear to give the applicant an adequate indication that the data relating to his conviction would be processed after such conviction had become spent and also as to the maximum duration of such processing? Did the term “individuals convicted for committing a crime”, referred to in section 17 of the Police Act, refer to all individuals convicted of a criminal offence, including those whose convictions had become spent? Does the processing of information on convictions constitute a legal consequence of conviction – as referred to in Article 86 of the Criminal Code – which should be annulled after the conviction becomes spent? What is the maximum period during which information on criminal convictions may be processed?

(c) Does Russian law provide, for each stage of the processing of data relating to criminal convictions, appropriate and adequate safeguards against arbitrary and disproportionate interference with the right to respect for private life (see M.M. , cited above, §§ 195-207)?

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998 - 2026

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