Mother challenges 'ludicrous' council over use of spy powers
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A mother-of-three branded a council "ludicrous and completely
outrageous" today as she took the authority to court for using
controversial powers to spy on her family.
Poole Borough Council was accused of playing "fast and loose" in
its attempts to establish whether Jenny Paton's children lived in
the correct school catchment area.
Her complaint surrounds the use of the controversial Regulation of
Investigatory Powers Act (Ripa).
Speaking before a landmark two-day Investigatory Powers Tribunal
hearing in central London, Ms Paton, 40, said: "Some of the
operational aspects are ludicrous and completely outrageous and, I
think, we all need protecting from the way local authorities are
using Ripa.
"This is about saying 'no more' - let's have more safeguards and
better scrutiny."
Also speaking outside court, James Welch, a lawyer from Liberty
which is representing Ms Paton, said: "We are asking this tribunal
to declare that the surveillance powers used to watch Ms Paton were
unlawful.
"This is not about the money - it's about the legal
principle."
It is alleged a council official made notes documenting the comings
and goings of the mother-of-three and her partner, Tim Joyce, for
nearly three weeks to find out if the family lived at an address in
the catchment area for Lilliput First School, Dorset.
Ms Paton questioned why officials did not simply knock on the door
and speak to her if they doubted her story.
Ripa, dubbed a "snooper's charter", is used to monitor relatively
trivial offences by some local councils.
The hearing comes as it was learned that a new use will be found
for the Ripa, which was introduced in 2000 to give the police,
security services and Revenue and Customs the powers to spy on
people in the fight against crime and terrorism.
Powers under the Act will be used to track down parents who refuse
to pay child support.
Investigators will be given access to the phone and internet
records of thousands of fathers who lie about their wealth or
refuse to co-operate with the Child Maintenance and Enforcement
Commission.
School admissions are a dinner party hot topic of conversation
along with property prices, Gordon Nardell, representing the
family, told the hearing's judging panel.
Mr Nardell said: "The complainants have and were found to have
played by the rules but this local authority played fast and
loose."
He told the hearing her family could had been proven to have been
living in the right area by other means than spying.
He added: "It's a hot topic at the moment. School admissions are
second only or joint first with property prices in pubs and around
dinner tables in the south."
He said the case was about "liberty" and the "extraordinary powers"
of local authorities.
The family was watched 21 times over three weeks around February
last year, the hearing was told.
Mr Nardell said it was "quite extraordinary" the surveillance was
authorised.
After revealing how family members were reported as being watched
in a log, he added: "It speaks for itself in terms of its
extent."
Investigators were watching "comings and goings" from the family's
home address and following a car, he said.
Mr Nardell added: "There is plainly an interference with home
life."
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