Example sentences of "[art] police national [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Special Branch , which works closely with MI5 , has its own computer system which keeps records on many millions of people none of whom have committed any offence ( if they had they would be on the Police National Computer ) split into 27 different groups such as ‘ interesting ’ , ‘ controversial ’ and ‘ subversive ’ .
2 EIGHT police forces in Britain have plans to link their computerised criminal files ( which hold both criminals and suspects ) to the Police National Computer ( PNC ) in London .
3 Already in Britain there are plans for putting into communication the computer-based personal information systems of DHSS , the Driving and Vehicle Licensing Centre , the Police National Computer and the Inland Revenue ; and the embossed plastic cards with unique machine-readable numerical identifiers which are now issued automatically to all school-leavers to mark their entry into the National Insurance scheme will in a few years ' time be , in effect , national identity cards .
4 As for mainframes , the only one Siemens Nixdorf actually has installed in the UK is a 7.000 BS2000 Model H120-R — the Police National Computer .
5 Although essentially separate and independent , they share a number of resources including the central criminal record department , the police national computer and the national reporting centre .
6 For example , the Police National Computer ( PNC ) has a Suspect and Stolen Vehicles file which lists cars seen at demonstrations or owned by people who the police simply wish to keep an eye on , as well as vehicles suspected of being stolen or belonging to criminals ( Manwaring-White , 1983:58–9 ) .
7 The same sanction is also meant to protect criminal records in the police national computer , but even here it 's not a sufficient deterrent .
8 's criminal record , along with five million others , is stored here on the police national computer , based at Hendon .
9 Relaxed and expansive in his office , explained how he used a local policeman to obtain details from 's criminal record on the police national computer .
10 details several cases details from the er the police national computer , er for sale at prices varying from sort of fifty pounds to a hundred and fifty pounds
11 I welcome very much the opportunity to raise on the Adjournment the question of the working of the police national computer mark 2 and the need for effective safeguards , and I am delighted that this debate is starting at a relatively civilised hour .
12 The police national computer mark 2 came on stream last autumn , and I understand that its direct access capacity is 190 million bytes , with a further 80,000 million bytes available as back-up on disk .
13 I understand that the Greater Manchester force still does not have the necessary computer capacity to take full advantage of the police national computer mark 2 .
14 I hope that the Minister will confirm who is entitled to have access to the police national computer .
15 Either the investigating officer , using his own personal radio , or the officer accompanying him is then usually able to check those details almost immediately on the police national computer .
16 I asked the Home Secretary to list the kinds of information currently held on the police national computer under the data class of warning signals .
17 Their inclusion and removal is at the discretion of the force which enters the record on the police national computer .
18 of detected crime did the suspicions on the police national computer lead to convictions .
19 The temptation now , however , is to leave the information on the police national computer .
20 Can the Minister tell us how information is taken off the police national computer ?
21 How many entries on the police national computer are deleted each week ?
22 I understand that the only guidelines for the police national computer were produced by the Association of Chief Police Officers in 1987 .
23 Those guidelines were produced for the police national computer mark I. It is now almost five years since they were published .
24 I am interested in whether the police national computer is linked with poll tax registers , electoral rolls and telephone numbers .
25 The police national computer has a list of prostitutes , but I understand that it applies only to London .
26 I make no complaint about such information being kept , but I am worried about it appearing on the police national computer when the original request had nothing to do with prostitution .
27 The Government should have made a statement on the way in which the police national computer operates ; it should not have been necessary for me or the National Council for Civil Liberties to prise information from them .
28 The police and the Government can be proud of the police national computer because it fights crime , but it is important that they offer assurance to the general public that it can not be misused and does result in people being dealt with differently .
29 Numerous questions have been asked in the House about the police national computer , but to my knowledge this is the first opportunity we have had in recent times to discuss wider issues .
30 The police national computer has been in operation since 1974 .
  Next page