CNPD (Portugal) - Deliberação 2021/1569
CNPD (Portugal) - Deliberação/2021/1569 | |
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Authority: | CNPD (Portugal) |
Jurisdiction: | Portugal |
Relevant Law: | Article 5(1)(e) GDPR Article 5(1)(a) GDPR Article 9(1) GDPR Article 13(1) GDPR Article 13(2) GDPR Article 35(3)(b) GDPR Article 83(5)(a) GDPR Decreto-Lei n. 433/82 Lei n. 58/2019 |
Type: | Other |
Outcome: | n/a |
Started: | |
Decided: | 21.12.2021 |
Published: | 14.01.2022 |
Fine: | 1250000,00 EUR |
Parties: | n/a |
National Case Number/Name: | Deliberação/2021/1569 |
European Case Law Identifier: | n/a |
Appeal: | n/a |
Original Language(s): | Portuguese |
Original Source: | CNPD (in PT) |
Initial Contributor: | Jennifer Vidal Ferreira and Giovanna Lahude |
The Portuguese DPA imposed a €1,250,000 fine on the Lisbon Municipality for sharing personal and sensitive data of protestors with third parties, including the embassies and foreign ministers of the countries targeted by the protests.
English Summary
Facts
The case has its origins in what became known in the Portuguese media as “Russiagate”, when it became known that the Lisbon Municipality (the Municipality) had collected and shared personal data belonging to a promoter of a demonstration in Lisbon in favour of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, and whose personal data was subsequently shared with Russian authorities. It was then revealed that data from many other protest promoters had been shared with a vast set of third parties in the past, including the offices of the Portuguese Prime Minister, the Minister of Internal Administration (MAI) and the Public Security Police (PSP), as well as embassies and foreign ministers from third countries targeted by protests in Lisbon.
Although this practice was carried out at least since 2012, and up until 2021 (as an internal database of the Municipality showed), the decision focuses on cases that occurred from 2018 and onward, corresponding to the entry into force of the GDPR. Within the decision is a list of 111 specific protests, and the data that was collected and shared in each case. The data collected from the protestors included name, address (postal or electronic), profession, telephone number, nationality, date of birth, affiliations, marital status, tax identification number, civil identification number, residence permit details, and sometimes even copies of civil identification documents.
After an initial draft decision by the Portuguese DPA (CNPD), the Municipality presented its defense, in which they argued, among other things, that their actions did not constitute willful misconduct but rather based on a per-existing tradition within civil governments, and the execution of "bureaucratic procedure" that was not detected as problematic when evaluating internal conformity with GDPR. They also stated that the Mayor had issued an order dated April 3 2013, in which it was established that the data collected on protestors should only be shared with the MAI and PSP, which was justified in order to ensure not only the safety of the protest, but also the provision of additional public services such as electricity and urban cleaning. The Municipality claimed that any sharing of data beyond these agencies was attributable to officials acting contrary to the Mayor's order, and that any assessment on the subjectivity of these actions should find them to be slightly censurable, but not malicious.
With regards to its potential obligation to carry out a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA), the Municipality argued that this obligation had legally prescribed. They also argued that the data shared should not be considered sensitive data under Article 9(1) GDPR as it does not reveal any of the dimensions protected within this provision, and that the adherence of promoters to the causes defended in the demonstrations were made manifestly public, including on social networks, which constitutes an exception to the processing of this kind of data under Article 9(2)(e) GDPR.
Lastly, the Municipality claimed that there was no applicable rule to sanction them, since the imposition of fines only apply to the public sector when established by a national law according to Article 83(7) GDPR, and asked for an exemption of fines in the terms of Article 44(3) of the Portuguese GDPR National Implementation Law 58/2019,
Holding
Lisbon City Council's arguments:
When notified about the content of the Draft Deliberation/2021/16 and in accordance with the Portuguese rule called General Regime for Administrative Offenses (RGCO – Decreto-Lei nº 433/82), the Municipality of Lisbon presented its defense, saying that:
1. That the offense attributed for not having prepared a Data Protection Impact Assessment was prescribed; 2. That the CNPD had not previously warned Lisbon City Council under the terms of article 39 (3) of Law No. 58/2019; 3. Nullity of the accusation for omission of the subjective elements of the type; 4. Action was based on the already established tradition under the jurisdiction of civil governments; 5. That it had dedicated financial and human resources to adequate its internal practices to the requirements of the GDPR; 6. The procedure was corrected when the complaint was fullfilled on 03/18/2021; 7. Disagreement with the allegation about “intention” (subjective element) 8. That there is no sanctioning rule that applies to the Lisbon City Council as a public entity, as it understands that the national legislator was responsible for defining “if” and “when” applicable sanctions in accordance with the wording of article 83 (7) of the GDPR. It argues that there is no sanctioning rule applicable to non-business entities in the public sector in Law No. 58/2019 - which enforces the implementation of the GDPR in the national legal system. 9. That, in the case of a violation, which occurred, in part, as in the case of sending notices to entities without legitimacy to have access to them, this was due to employees who acted contrary to an internal rule issued by the Mayor of Lisbon, called Decreto de 13 April 2013, in which it was determined that notices of demonstrations should only be sent to the Ministry of Internal Administration (MAI) and to the Public Security Police (PSP); 10. That the information referring to the promoters of demonstrations in the contents of the Notices should not, in certain cases, be considered special categories of data, as provided for in article 9 (1) of the GDPR, as they do not reveal specially protected dimensions. It also argued that the information on the supporters of protests and the promoted causes were made public on social media, in which case the derogation of article 9 (2) (e) of the GDPR applied; 11. That there was a public interest in justifying the lawfulness of the processing operations and that the domestic Portuguese rule that regulates the right of assembly, Decreto Lei No. 406/74, should take into account the current municipal reality of not having competence to guarantee its normative requirements to manage the routes and the prerogatives of authority; 12. That the Ministry of Internal Administration and the Public Security Police have competence and are based on guaranteeing the security force to receive shared contact data; 13. That the municipal services received information because they are linked to the same entity, the Municipal Police, and because of the need to coordinate urban cleaning services or provide electricity for demonstrations directly with the promoters within the legal short term of 2 working days; 14. That there was no fault or intent on the part of the Municipality as it was complying with a bureaucratic procedure that out the treatments considered undue; 15. That it must be considered a single breach, evaluating them jointly under the terms of article 83 (3) of the GDPR, since all the offenses charged are strictly connected; 16. That the imposition of fines be waived in accordance with the rule of execution of the GDPR in the internal order of Portugal, Law nº 58/2019, in its article 44 (3).
Consideration of the arguments by CNPD:
1. On the allegation that the offense attributed to not having prepared a DPIA is time-barred;
The Portuguese Authority understood that it is unacceptable to say that the violation is prescribed for failure to comply with the duty to prepare a DPIA provided for in article 35 (3) (b) GDPR , on personal data processing activities, because, among other reasons, the rule that implements the provisions of the GDPR in the Portuguese legal system, Law No. , in this case the preparation of DPIA, even after payment of fines related to the sanction applied, if possible;
Thus, there is no mention of prescription, also because the Municipality of Lisbon admitted that it is a necessary and enforceable obligation in its defense, by claiming to have initiated a procedure for the preparation of DPIA on the processing of personal data and for the definition of storage periods applicable to them. , enabling the erasure of personal data unnecessary for the purposes;
Still regarding the performance of DPIA, the CNPD pointed out that the need to carry out a DPIA is not restricted to the presence of processing of special categories of data and that the potential violation or danger of the exercise of fundamental rights, such as freedom of assembly and of demonstration, in itself, would justify, regarding the processing of data of the promoters of demonstration, the realization of a DPIA;
2. On the allegation of lack of prior warning under the terms of article 39 (3) of Law No. 58/2019, the Portuguese DPA imputed all violations (offending conduct, which violate the national rule of the General Regime of Administrative Offenses - RGCO) to deceit title. The obligation of prior warning is given, pursuant to article 39 (3) of Law No. 58/2019, when the alleged conduct is not malicious.
3. On the nullity by omission of subjective elements of the type: The Municipality of Lisbon alleges that the indictment does not specify the revealing facts/indicators of the subjective elements of the type of administrative offence.
In this argument, the CNPD says that what there should be is a sequential description, narratively oriented and spatio-temporally circumstantial, of the essential elements for the singularization of the behavior relevant to administrative offences, and that this description must contemplate the objective and subjective characterization of the action and omission whose imputation is involved. The authority described the facts and behavior of the Municipality of Lisbon - the CNPD invokes the jurisprudence of the Court of Appeal of Coimbra to corroborate the reasoning.
4. On the allegation that the action was based on the tradition already established under the jurisdiction of civil governments
The Municipality of Lisbon says that the way in which they were sent and the destination of notices of demonstrations were based on the procedure established in 2012 through Protocol No. GPCML/1/2012 by the then Mayor of Lisbon, at the time notices - containing personal data of the prosecutors - for the Prime Minister's Office, the Security Coordinating Office, the Office of the Minister of Internal Affairs, the Office of the Deputy Minister for Parliamentary Affairs, the Public Security Police, the Territorial and the Lisbon Municipal Police. In case they were targeted, Parliament, Ministries, Embassies and municipal services were added;
The CNPD recalled, in its Deliberation, that the Municipality of Lisbon itself recognized this disorganization of the remittance service, when the Mayor issued, on April 13, 2013, an order (Annex III) that amended the protocol of the previous year. The new order limited the sending of notices to the Ministry of Internal Administration (MAI) and the Public Security Police (PSP), although, in the CNPD's understanding, it was insufficient and was silent on the real destination of personal data;
The fact that the project team's action plan for the implementation of the general regulation was approved only on August 1, 2019, corroborates the understanding of lack of concern with compliance with the data protection regulation. In the CNPD's view, there is consistency in the disregard for personal data protection rules and notorious laxity on data protection management. The point is exhaustively substantiated by the CNPD.
Regarding the commitment of means to comply with the requirements of the RGPD, the CNPD highlights the fact that the Lisbon Chamber remained inactive during the two years of vacatio legis to start adapting its procedures to the regulation, which only reveals , in addition, the high censorship of the agency's conduct.
5. Regarding the correction of the procedure after the complaint of 03/18/2021, the CNPD once again highlights the need to carry out a DPIA and reinforces that the limitation on sending notices to the PSP and MAI is in disagreement with the Decreto Lei, being the sending of such information is disproportionate.
6. Regarding the subjective elements pointed out to the Municipality's conduct, the CNPD mentions that the proof of intent is made through inferences from the factual circumstances of the specific case, being certain what is translated from the actions of the Municipality of Lisbon is their lack of concern regarding the obligations arising from the legislation of data protection. The CNPD also mentions that the Order of 03/13/2013 only reveals the manifest violation of the protective rules for personal data and that there is no need to justify the violation of personal data legislation in the action of Lisbon City Council officials. The authority points out circumstances observed in the operational procedure of the body, including the non-verification, in an active way, of compliance with data protection rules to an “organizational culture, at the very least, very deficient” - acting contrary to the principle of responsibility.
7. Regarding the lack of a sanctioning rule applicable to the Municipality of Lisbon, the CNPD argues that the imposition of fines on public entities is regulated in Law No. this law apply equally to public and private entities”.
8. Regarding the responsibility of the Lisbon City Council and its employees, the CNPD rejects the Lisbon City Council's attempt to remove responsibility from itself, even more considering that this allegation is based on the non-compliance, by the said employees, of the Order issued in April /2013. The CNPD, on grounds already presented in other topics, considers the order itself insufficient and silent on the destination of the personal data contained in the notices about protesters;
9. Regarding the categorization of personal data as special category data, the CNPD highlights the mistake made by the City Council, including, in defense, of confusing the purpose of the demonstrations with the purpose of the demonstrations notices - as if it were not a problem the issue of notices/reports shared about data from Protestants as they have already gone public expressing their opinion.
The authority considers the fact that more and more protesters around the world are concerned about revealing their identities, since “the growing array of means of identifying, recording and preserving personal information in public places should lead to the updated consideration of the risks that these means pose to freedom of expression and that the fact that a person goes to a demonstration is made public does not authorize any entity to proceed with the processing of that person's personal data" and that publicity should not be taken advantage of. the position of protesters to catalog people according to their ideas, orientations and religions;
10. Regarding the exemption from the application of fines on the grounds of financial difficulties faced because of the pandemic, the CNPD informs that it took this circumstance into account and, if it had not done so, the severity of the fines imposed would certainly be much higher.
FINE: i. Considering that the essential presupposition to carry out the legal accumulation of partial fines is the practice of several infractions by the Lisbon City Council, before the conviction for any of them becomes final, and that the partial sanctions are of the same type, the CNPD, in addition under the combined provisions of article 83 (3) GDPR and article 19 (3) of the Portuguese RGCO, a single fine of € 1,250,000.00 (one million, two hundred and fifty thousand euros), due to the violation the principle of lawfulness, loyalty and transparency, violation of the principle of data minimization, in terms of "need to know", violation of the duty to provide the information provided for in article 13 GDPR, violation of the principle limitation of retention and breach of the obligation to carry out a data protection impact assessment.
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English Machine Translation of the Decision
The decision below is a machine translation of the Portuguese original. Please refer to the Portuguese original for more details.