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Sensitive British military papers found strewn across street

Sensitive army documents include details about soldiers' ranks, emails, shift patterns, weapon issue records, and military facilities

Sensitive British military papers found strewn across street

The papers were spilled from a black bin bag that was burst open and lying on a Newcastle street.

Courtesy: BBC

Britain's defense ministry said Friday it had launched an urgent probe after a football fan found piles of sensitive military papers strewn across a street in northern England.

Newcastle United supporter Mike Gibbard said he stumbled across the documents on his way to a game in the city on March 16.

The army papers -- some marked "OFFICIAL - SENSITIVE" -- were spilling from a black bin bag and "spread up the road," Gibbard said on BBC Radio Newcastle on Friday.

"I peered down and started to see names on bits of paper and numbers, and thought 'what's that?'" he said.

The BBC said the papers- many of them torn- included details about soldiers' ranks, emails, shift patterns, weapon issue records, and access information for military facilities.

One sheet was headed "Armory keys and hold IDS codes," an apparent reference to an intruder detection system.

The broadcaster said several documents appeared to relate to Britain's largest army garrison, Catterick, but security consultant Gary Hibberd told AFP the information risked compromising wider national security.

"The impact and scale of this is quite big- it's not just a blunder. This will be investigated within highest levels of the military," Hibberd said.

A Ministry of Defense spokesperson said: "We are looking into this urgently, and the matter is the subject of an ongoing internal investigation."

They confirmed that "documentation allegedly relating to the department was recently handed in to the police."

Northumbria Police told AFP that officers had been alerted to the find in the Scotswood district and had since passed on the papers to the defense ministry.

UK government guidelines state that sensitive documents should be incinerated, pulped, or shredded; however, confidential papers have ended up in several unusual places in the past.

One of the most high-profile cases took place in 2008, when a British civil servant left a folder of intelligence documents marked "Top Secret" on a train seat in London.

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