
1 
These Regulations may be cited as the Provision of Confidential Statistical Information to the Statistical Office of the European Communities (Restriction on Disclosure) Regulations 1991 and shall come into force on 1st January 1992.
2 
In these Regulations–
 “confidential statistical information” means statistical information which has been–
(a) declared or classified as confidential in accordance with its law or national practice by the member State providing it, and
(b) provided to the SOEC by a member State in accordance with article 3 of Council Regulation (EURATOM, EEC) No. 1588/90 on the transmission of data subject to statistical confidentiality to the Statistical Office of the European Communities;
 “the SOEC” means the Statistical Office of the European Communities.
3 

(1) If any officer or employee of the SOEC or any individual who, under a contract for services with the SOEC, is required to carry out duties on the premises of the SOEC, knowingly or recklessly discloses within Great Britain confidential statistical information without the authority of the member State who provided that information to the SOEC, that person shall be guilty of an offence and liable–
(a) on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three months, or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum, or both;
(b) on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or a fine, or both.
(2) Summary proceedings in Scotland for an offence against these Regulations shall not be commenced after the expiration of 3 years from the commission of the offence. Subject to this (and notwithstanding anything in section 331 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1975) such proceedings may (in Scotland) be commenced at any time within 12 months after the date on which evidence sufficient in the Lord Advocate’s opinion to justify the proceedings came to his knowledge; and sub-section (3) of that section applies for the purpose of this paragraph as it applies for the purpose of that section.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (2) above, a certificate of the Lord Advocate as to the date on which such evidence as is referred to in that paragraph came to his knowledge is conclusive of that fact.
Norman Lamont
Chancellor of the Exchequer
7th December 1991