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Prevention of Crime Act 1871, Section 6 - Register of Criminals 
1871 
  
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LL/35262 
  
The Law Times, Volume 51 - liv Statutes, 34 & 35 VICT. C.112 - Oct. 28, 1871.
 
6. Register and photographing of criminals. The following enactments shall be mode with a view to facilitate the identification of criminals:
 
(1.) Registers of all persons convicted of crime in the United Kingdom shall be kept in such form and containing such particulars as may from time to time be prescribed, in Great Britain by one of Her Majesty's principal Secretaries of State, and in Ireland by the Lord Lieutenant:
 
(2.) The register for England shall bo kept in London under the management of the Commissioner of Police of the metropolis, or such other person as the Secretary of State may appoint:
 
(8.) The register for Scotland shall be kept in Edinburgh under the management of the secretary to the managers of the general prison at Perth, or such other person as the Secretary of State may appoint:
 
(4.) The register for Ireland shall be kept in Dublin under the management of the Commissioners of Police for the police district of Dublin metropolis, or such other person as the Lord Lieutenant may from time to time appoint
 
(5.) In every prison, the gaoler or other governor of the prison shall make returns of the parsons convieted of crime and coming within his custody; and such returns shall be in such form or formas and contain such particulars in Great Britain as the Secretary of State, and in Ireland as the said Lord Lieutenant, may require; and every gaoler or other governor of a prison who refuses or neglects to transmit such-returns, or wilfully transmits a return containing any false or imperfect statement, shall for every such offence forfeit a sum not exceeding twenty pounds, to be recovered summarily:
 
(6.) In Great Britain the Secretary of Slate, and in Ireland the said Lord Lieutenant, may make regulations as to the photographing of all prisoners convicted of crime who may for the time being be confined in any prison in Great Britain or Ireland, and may in such regulations prescribe the time or times at which and the manner and dress in which such prisoners are to be taken, and the number of photographs of each prisoner to be printed, and the persons to whom such photographs are to be sent:
 
(7.) Any regulations made by the Secretary of State as to the photographing of prisoners in any prison in England shall be deemed to be regulations for the government of that prison, and binding on all persons, in the same manner as if they were contained in the first schedule annexed to the Prison Act, 1865.
 
(8.) Any regulations made by the Secretary of State as to the photographing of the prisoners in any prison in Scotland shall be deemed to be rules for prisons in Scotland, and as such shall be binding on all whom they may concern, in the same manner as if the same were made under and in virtue of the powers contained in the Prisons (Scotland) Administration Act, 1860:
 
(9.) Any regulations made by the Lord Lieutenant as to the photographing of prisoners in any prison in Ireland shall be doemed to be byelaws duly made by the Lord Lieutenant, and shall be binding on all persons, in the same manner as if the same were made under the authority of the Act passed in the session holden in the nineteenth and twentieth years of the reign of Her present Majesty, chapter sixty-eight:
 
(10.) Any prisoner refusing to obey any regulation made in pursuance of this section shall be deemed guilty of an offence against prison discipline, in England within the meaning of the fifty-seventh regulation in the first schedule annexed to the said Prison Act, 1865, in Scotland within the meaning of the rules for prisons in Scotland, certified under the hand of one of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, under and by virtue of the Prisons (Scotland) Administration Act, 1860, and in Ireland within the meaning of the fifteenth regulation contained in section one hundred and nine of the Act passed in the seventh year of the reign of his late Majesty King George the Fourth, chapter seventy-four:
 
(11.) Any authority having power to make regulations in pursuance of this section may from time to time modify repeal, or add to any regulations so made:
 
(12.) Any expenses incurred in pursuance of this section shall be defrayed as follows; (that is to say,)
 
The expense of keeping the register in London, Edinburgh, and Dublin shall, to such amount as may be sanctioned by the Treasury, be paid out of moneys provided by Parliament:
 
The expenses incurred in photographing the prisoners in any prison shall be deemed to be part of the expenses incurred in the maintenance of the prison, and shall be defrayed accordingly.
 
This section shall not apply to the prisons for convicts under the superintendence of the directors of convict prisons or to any military or naval prison. 
 
 
  
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