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Section 60
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Originally brought in to combat football hooliganism, section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 effectively re-enacts the much-hated sus laws of the 1970s and 1980s.
It states: 'Where a police officer of or above the rank of superintendent reasonably believes that: (a) incidents involving serious violence may take place in any locality in his area and (b) it is expedient to do so to prevent their occurrence, he may give an authorisation that the powers to stop and search persons and vehicles conferred by this section shall be exercisable at any place within that locality for a period not exceeding 24 hours.'
The Act empowers a police officer in a section 60 zone 'in the exercise of those powers, [to] stop any person or vehicle and make any search he thinks fit whether or not he has any grounds for suspecting that the person or vehicle is carrying weapons or articles of that kind'.
I don't fully understand your query as stated.
Are you asking if a law is legal?
My last paragraph states that section 60 empowers the police to stop and search anybody whether there are grounds to suspect them or not and so no suspicion can be inferred after the fact, especially if no weapons were found upon your person.
Secondly, even if the information is kept (which I severely doubt), it's not a criminal charge or even an official caution, so this sort of information retention is pretty much harmless. It's not the sort of thing that would appear on a criminal record check, even the ultra-strict ones that you would go through to apply for jobs at schools and similar places.
Thirdly, well done on the polite co-operation. So many people dig theirselves a deeper hole by being unnecessarily stroppy. The politer and more reasonable you are, the more reasonable the police will be back. Cause them trouble and they *could* make you day hell. You want proof of this, watch any cop-reality-TV show.
Actually ledow under PACE and current legislation pertaining to Stop and Search there is no compunction for the 'detainee' to offer any information about their identity to the police, in fact the onus in the police to identify themselves and which station they are from.
That being said the police do ask that you at least offer your ethnicity so that they keep their statistics in order - read my link above.