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'Ludicrous': Poole Borough Council spied on Jenny Paton, pictured arriving at the tribunal with her partner Tim Joyce yesterday, 21 times in three weeks
A council which used controversial laws to spy on a mother and her family 21 times in three weeks insisted today that its actions only 'minimally' invaded their privacy.
Poole Borough Council had also used Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (Ripa) legislation on two other occasions to determine whether families were living in the right school catchment areas, a landmark hearing was told.
Mother-of-three Jenny Paton had applied for a school in Poole which was 'educational gold dust', Ben Hooper, counsel for the district's borough council, said.
Ms Paton, 40, had branded the authority 'ludicrous and completely outrageous' as she took the authority to court for its use of Ripa legislation.
In the second day's evidence before the Investigatory Powers Tribunal in central London, Mr Hooper told the panel: 'It was minimally invasive of privacy.'