
I know this looks like a longy. But read on, it’s interesting.
There was a story in the Daily Mail today to which there are a few hidden details which merit an airing.
I actually thought the tale deserved a better show – it appeared at the bottom of page 19 and stated that a "leaked" e-mail had revealed
ministers want to keep the DNA of innocent people on the national database for six years.
A bit of background – the Government has a huge DNA database which holds profiles of many innocent people, including kids.
Some angry people who had their DNA recorded by police despite never being charged with anything, took the Government to the European Court which ruled it was illegitimate for ministers to endlessly retain the DNA of innocents.

This blog revealed in
March and showed again in
April that then Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker was looking for ways around the European ruling, with the good old statutory instrument – a law which gets passed without a Commons debate – as the weapon of choice.
In other words, ministers have been planning to retain innocent people's DNA for months.
The "leaked" e-mail however, and I have seen the original, shows more than that. It reveals something that is as worrying as the Government’s desire to keep DNA.

The document shows that officials have been tasked, and are working hard, to gather evidence to back the Government’s chosen view point – that innocents’ DNA should be kept for six years.
I know it sounds benign, but actually it is very dangerous. It suggests there has been no investigation to find evidence to indicate whether
it is a good idea to keep innocent people’s DNA.
Rather than the results of an investigation informing the Government’s conclusion, they have reached their conclusion and are looking for evidence to back it up.It’s that kind of backwards decision-making process that leads to fiascos like the Iraq War's dodgy dossier.

On a lighter point the e-mail was not actually leaked, at least not purposefully. It was sent by mistake from a Home Office official to a lobby hack who happens to bear the same name as another Home Office official.
They tried to recall it several times in a panic, but it was too late. A wonderful gaffe.