Yes—add these specifics so the ICO has everything they need and can see the scale of non-compliance.
What to include:
Exact chronology (with dates):• Alleged contravention: 23/12/2024
• SAR made: 28/08/2025
• Breach occurred: 28/08/2025 (identified 29/08/2025)
• “Breach letter” dated: 29/08/2025 (but not delivered to you)
• Operator’s first notification to you: 13/10/2025
• Note: that’s ~45 days to notify the data subject.
Breach notification timing checks:• Ask ICO to verify whether CPM notified the ICO within 72 hours of awareness (UK GDPR Art. 33). Require CPM’s ICO reference number and submission date/time.
• They failed to notify you “without undue delay” (UK GDPR Art. 34). Quantify the delay and point out you only learned of it after you challenged their SAR.
Breach notification content gaps (Art. 34(2)):• Did not promptly provide: nature of breach, likely consequences/risks, measures taken/proposed, steps you should take, and clear DPO contact.
• Their “letter” was not actually served to you (neither to your current address nor electronically), despite them successfully sending other letters to your current address.
Security & governance failures:• Failure to ensure appropriate technical/organisational measures (UK GDPR Art. 5(1)(f) and Art. 32).
• The breach occurred during a SAR—a high-risk process—suggesting inadequate checking/authorisation workflows.
Incomplete/incorrect SAR (Arts. 12 & 15):• Omitted BW Legal from the recipient list (Art. 15(1)(c)).
• Withheld/failed to supply personal data you specifically requested (ANPR event log for your VRM; RingGo/VRM back-office references; internal notes; portal/audit logs; DVLA KADOE request/response; any address-verification records).
• Provided a blanket assertion of “lawful deletion” without retention schedule or deletion logs.
Data accuracy concern (Art. 5(1)(d)):• Final Notice dated 12/05/2025 was sent to your old address despite your DVLA updates being effective well before that date. Ask ICO to examine their address-accuracy process before escalation/third-party sharing.
Harm & risk:• Distress, anxiety, and risk of misuse due to disclosure of full name, address, phone, email to an unauthorised individual.
• Extra time and cost spent chasing a compliant SAR and correcting their record.
• Ongoing litigation risk worsened by inaccurate processing and late breach notification.
Evidence list (attach):• CPM email (13/10/2025) + attached “breach letter” dated 29/08/2025.
• Original SAR request (28/08/2025) and CPM’s SAR bundle omitting BW Legal.
• Your follow-up demanding recipients (explicitly naming BW Legal).
• BW Legal letters to your current address (proving they had the correct address).
• Proof of DVLA update timing.
• RingGo receipts/screenshots.
• Any CPM statements about “lawful deletion” and retention (to highlight gaps).
What you want the ICO to do (remedies):• Require CPM to deliver a complete, compliant SAR (including full recipient/disclosure log and the missing personal data).
• Assess Art. 33/34 compliance (timeliness and content); if late/inadequate, require remedial action.
• Require CPM to implement enhanced SAR handling controls (dual-check before disclosure, audited recipient confirmation, staff retraining) and to evidence those measures to you/ICO.
• Record enforcement as appropriate; consider a formal reprimand.
• (Optional) Note you reserve rights to compensation under Art. 82 UK GDPR and s.168 DPA 2018 for distress.
Here's a draft you could use:
Subject: Complaint re Countrywide Parking Management Ltd – Late breach notification, incomplete SAR, and data accuracy failures
Dear ICO,
I wish to lodge a complaint against Countrywide Parking Management Ltd (CPM) for multiple breaches of the UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018 in relation to Parking Charge Notice [PCN reference] concerning vehicle [VRM].
Chronology (all dates 2024/2025)
• Alleged contravention: 23/12/2024
• SAR submitted to CPM: 28/08/2025
• Personal data breach occurred: 28/08/2025 (identified by CPM: 29/08/2025)
• CPM “breach letter” dated: 29/08/2025 (not received by me)
• CPM first notified me of the breach: 13/10/2025 (via email)
• CPM’s SAR output omitted BW Legal as a recipient, despite ongoing BW Legal correspondence to my current address.
Issues and legal basis
1. Late and inadequate breach notification (Arts. 34 and 33)
• CPM disclosed my full name, postal address, phone number and email to an unauthorised individual during the SAR process on 28/08/2025, identified 29/08/2025.
• I was not notified until 13/10/2025 (circa 45 days later), which is not “without undue delay” (Art. 34).
• Please verify whether CPM notified the ICO within 72 hours of awareness (Art. 33) and obtain their ICO reference and submission date/time.
2. Security and governance failures (Art. 5(1)(f) and Art. 32)
• The breach occurred during a high-risk process (SAR disclosure), indicating inadequate technical/organisational measures and quality controls.
3. Incomplete/incorrect SAR (Arts. 12 and 15)
• CPM’s SAR response omitted BW Legal from the recipient list (Art. 15(1)(c)) though CPM and BW Legal were actively processing my data.
• CPM failed to provide personal data I requested that clearly relates to me/this PCN:
– ANPR event log for my VRM (reads/timestamps/camera IDs/retention entries)
– RingGo/payment back-office records referencing my VRM/PCN (matching/mismatch notes)
– Internal notes; portal/web-form audit entries; decision records
– DVLA KADOE request/response for this PCN (single request date/time, address returned)
– Any address-verification records referring to me before a Final Notice and before instructing solicitors
• CPM asserted “lawful deletion” but did not supply the applicable retention schedule or deletion logs.
4. Data accuracy and reasonable steps (Art. 5(1)(d))
• A Final Notice dated 12/05/2025 was sent to my former address despite my DVLA updates being effective weeks earlier. By contrast, BW Legal letters have reached my current address. This suggests CPM failed to take reasonable steps to ensure accuracy before escalation and sharing with third parties.
Harm and risk
• Disclosure of my name, address, phone and email to an unauthorised individual caused distress and risk of misuse.
• Additional time and expense incurred to obtain a compliant SAR and correct CPM’s record while facing parallel pre-action correspondence.
What I ask the ICO to do
• Require CPM to provide a complete and accurate SAR response, including a full recipient/disclosure log (identifying BW Legal and the unauthorised recipient with dates, purposes and lawful bases) and the missing personal data listed above, or a specific, justified exemption for each withheld item.
• Assess CPM’s compliance with Arts. 33 and 34 (timeliness and content of notifications) and with Arts. 5(1)(f)/32 (security controls), and require remedial action.
• Require CPM to implement enhanced SAR handling controls (dual checks before disclosure, supervised sign-off, audited recipient confirmation, staff training) and to evidence those measures.
• Record appropriate enforcement.
• Note that I reserve my rights to compensation under Art. 82 UK GDPR and s.168 DPA 2018 for distress.
Attachments (evidence)
• CPM email to me dated 13/10/2025 and attached “breach letter” dated 29/08/2025
• My SAR (28/08/2025) and CPM’s SAR bundle omitting BW Legal as a recipient
• My follow-up correspondence requesting a complete recipient log (explicitly naming BW Legal)
• BW Legal letters to my current address (showing correct address in use)
• Proof of DVLA update timing
• RingGo receipts/screenshots
• CPM statements asserting “lawful deletion” and “full disclosure”
My details
Name: [Full name]
Address: [Current postal address]
Email: [Email]
Phone: [Phone]
Controller: Countrywide Parking Management Ltd (DPO: [if known])
Third parties: BW Legal; Trace Debt Recovery; [unknown unauthorised recipient]
Yours faithfully,
[Full name]