School catchment family 'spied on' - News in brief - Evening Standard
       

School catchment family 'spied on'

A council has admitted it spied on a family using laws passed to track criminals and terrorists to find out if they were lying about living in a school catchment area.

The couple and their three children were put under surveillance without their knowledge by Poole Borough Council in Dorset for more than two weeks using powers under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA).

The family only found out about the spying when a school admissions manager told them.

The authority said it used the legislation to watch the family at home and in their daily movements because it wanted to know if they lived in the catchment area for a school which their three-year-old daughter wanted to attend.

Human rights pressure group Liberty called the spying "disproportionate" and "intrusive".

James Welch, legal director for Liberty said: "It's one thing to use covert surveillance in operations investigating terrorism and other serious crimes, but it has come to a pretty pass when this kind of intrusive activity is used to police school catchment areas.

"This is a ridiculously disproportionate use of RIPA and will undermine public trust in necessary and lawful surveillance."

The anonymous mother told the Bournemouth Echo she was shown the surveillance record, listing her movements from February 13 to March 3, including school runs with her children and the routes they drove.

The angry family told the newspaper the surveillance team wrote down detailed notes such as "female and three children enter target vehicle and drive off" and "curtains open and all lights on in premises".

The RIPA legislation allows councils to carry out surveillance but only if it suspects criminal acts have taken place.

News in brief in Pictures

Don't Miss
The Glamour Awards - stars turn on the style

Glamour Awards

Stars turn on the style
Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink at her first Buckingham Palace garden party

Garden party

Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink
FIRST review of Ridley Scott's latest sci-fi blockbuster Prometheus

First review

Is Ridley Scott's Prometheus any good?
Fair-weather goths

Fair-weather goths

The sultry shades of summer darks are coming out of the shadows
London gets ready for the Diamond Jubilee - in pictures

Diamond Jubilee

London gets ready - in pictures
Dog save the Queen: Corgis surge in popularity

Dog save the Queen

Corgis surge in popularity
'He’s a better ex than he was a husband', says Boris Johnson's ex wife

A better ex than husband

We talk to Boris Johnson's ex wife
TV Baftas - in pictures

Best of the Baftas

Stars on the red, white and blue carpet
You big softie: Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?

You big softie

Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?
Pop star Paloma Faith, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video

Gay marriage

Pop star, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video