ChatterBank0 min ago
Official Secrets Act
I signed and was bound by this Act in 1954, as a serving soldier handling 'sensitive' material in Germany, as part of my job. I left the Army several years later, but don't remember any sort of release document, apart from my demob papers. Am I still bound by the Act, and what if I am? No particular reason for this question, just mild curiosity -G-
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We are all bound by the Official Secrets Act(s). The OSA is a law, not a contract, so to be bound by it requires no signature just as no signature is required to be bound by the Road Traffic Act(s).
People working with sensitive information are commonly required to sign a statement to the effect that they agree to abide by the restrictions of the Official Secrets Act and is popularly referred to as "signing the Official Secrets Act". Signing is intended more as a reminder to the person that they are under such obligations.
People working with sensitive information are commonly required to sign a statement to the effect that they agree to abide by the restrictions of the Official Secrets Act and is popularly referred to as "signing the Official Secrets Act". Signing is intended more as a reminder to the person that they are under such obligations.
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Yes xerus, when all the Whartons are made unemployed after Scottish Independence and the base moves to Plymouth, that being the Wee Fat Haggis's preference in having a nuclear free Scotland - and we down here would welcome the base coming in......
Go for it, you Scots, we would vote yes to your independence, if we could.
Go for it, you Scots, we would vote yes to your independence, if we could.