More than 100,000 innocent people nationally have been added to the National DNA Database since the European Court of Human Rights ruled in December 2008 that the practice was illegal, research by the Liberal Democrats has revealed.
In Suffolk, 4 innocent people are added per day and 280 innocent people are added for every one person removed. Nationally, the average is 269.
The figures, contained in Parliamentary answers, show:
487,340 profiles have been added to the database since the ruling
This includes 101,367 innocent people -a rate of 282 a day
In that same period, just 400 people have been successfully removed from the database
For every innocent person that managed to have themselves removed from the DNA database under the 'exceptional case system' since the ECHR ruling, a further 253 innocent people have been added.
Commenting, Liberal Democrat Shadow Cabinet Office Minister, Jenny Willott said:
"It is appalling that the Government has taken the DNA of 100,000 innocent people since they were told the practice is illegal.
"By the time an innocent person manages to get their DNA removed from the database over 250 others will have been added.
"Despite the Government's promises to abide by the European Court's ruling, they are still doing everything they can to avoid it.
"Labour's cynical proposals will create a half-guilty class of people with their most intimate personal information held by the police for six years - even though they have done nothing wrong.
"This is a gross distortion of one of the fundamental principles of this country - that you are innocent until proven guilty."
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