HN83

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This article is part of the Undercover Research Portal at Powerbase - investigating corporate and police spying on activists



Part of a series on
undercover police officers
'HN83'
Male silhouette.png
Alias: unknown
Deployment: short period in 1980s
Unit:
Targets:
one group, unknown

HN83 is the cipher given to a former undercover officer with the Special Demonstration Squad who was deployed in the mid-1980s into an unnamed group. In their 60s.

John Mitting, Chair of the Undercover Policing Inquiry, ruled in May 2018, that HN83 would remain anonymous in the Inquiry and their cover name would not be released.[1]

  • For details of the N-numbers cipher system see the N officers page.

In the Undercover Policing Inquiry

  • 11 Jan 2018, directed that restriction orders applications to be submitted by end of Jan 2018.[2]
  • 7 Mar 2018: minded to - neither real or cover name can be published, with Mitting stating:[3]
The nature of the deployment and what I know of the personal circumstances of HN83, then and now, are inconsistent with personal wrongdoing during the deployment. The deployment created risks to the personal safety of HN83, which, to an extent which cannot be precisely estimated, remain. I am satisfied the risks are real. Although it would be desirable for evidence about the deployment of HN83 to be given in public and under the cover name, to do so would run those risks to safety. The risks are contingent... but if they were to materialise, the harm would be significant.
  • 15 May 2018: ruled issued restricting publication of real and cover names with Mitting writing:[1]
... the principal reason for the order which I will make is founded on the interference in the right to respect for an aspect of private life - physical integrity-, arising from the deployment. I remain satisfied that the nature of the deployment and what I know of circumstances of HN83, then and now, are inconsistent with personal wrongdoing during it. It is unfortunate that a fuller explanation of this view cannot be set out in an open note: to do so would compromise the order which I will make and pose some risk to the safety of HN83. In the clearly unlikely event that doubt is cast on that view during the substantive phase of the Inquiry, I will revisit it. If the risks to safety remain, I cannot now conceive of circumstances which would require me to revoke the order.
A closed note accompanied the final ruling.[1]


Notes