UK: The Princess of Wales’s hospital data breach not referred to police due to suspected ‘decoy’ plan


The Princess of Wales’s hospital data breach has not been referred to police as an expert explains that a “decoy” plan could have been in use – meaning her actual medical files were not accessed by the perpetrators.

Despite Health Minister Maria Caulfield revealing back in March that the police had been asked to look into the data breach, the case has not yet been referred to Scotland Yard. It was previously alleged that employees at the hospital, where Kate stayed for 13 days back in January for abdominal surgery, attempted to access the Princess of Wales’s private medical records – which is a criminal offence.

Read more…
Source: Express News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • UK: Cyber attack disables prison vans’ panic alarms

    November 6, 2024

    Tracking devices and panic alarms on prisoner transport vans have been disabled in a cyber attack. Serco, which has a contract for prisoner escort and custody services, was among companies hit by the cyber attack on Microlise. Microlise provides tracking software that enables Secro to keep track of the vans’ location and potential threats, and devices ...

  • UK: Council website back online after cyber attack

    November 1, 2024

    Burnley Council website is back online after being disrupted by a cyber attack yesterday afternoon. Services across numerous councils in the North West, including Tameside Council and Salford City Council were targeted with a Distributed Denial of Service attack (DDoS). IT teams have now successfully restored the website, and no data has been compromised. Read more… Source: MSN ...

  • Bedfordshire is the UK’s cyber crime capital

    October 30, 2024

    The rate in Bedfordshire was nearly four times higher than neighbouring Hertfordshire, which saw 1,300 incidents among its 1.2 million population, reveals analysis of National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB) data by IT experts Computer Care. Lincolnshire was the police area least affected by cyber crime, with only 438 reports among the one million population – equal ...

  • London taxi drivers wrongly hit with Ulez charges after TfL cyber attack

    October 13, 2024

    Thousands of black cab drivers have been wrongly hit with Ulez and Congestion Charge fines after the cyber attack against London’s transport authority. The Licensed Taxi Drivers’ Association (LTDA) said it had received thousands of calls this week from panicking cabbies who had begun receiving automated penalties from Transport for London (TfL). Read more… Source: MSN News Sign up ...

  • London Fire Brigade block almost 340,000 cyber attacks

    October 8, 2024

    The London Fire Brigade, the fire and rescue service for the UK’s capital, has been targeted by nearly 340,000 cyber-attacks over the past year. The data was collected under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), and analysed by the Parliament Street think tank, observing the number of blocked email attacks by the department. In total, the ...

  • UK’s Sellafield nuclear waste processing plant fined £333K for infosec blunders

    October 4, 2024

    The outfit that runs Britain’s Sellafield nuclear waste processing and decommissioning site has been fined £332,500 ($440,000) by the nation’s Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) for its shoddy cybersecurity practices between 2019 and 2023. Sellafield, located in Cumbria, England, manages more radioactive waste than any other nuclear site in the world, and decommissioning work happening at ...