Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Civil liBerties group wArns over CAmerAs

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MORE body cameras are used by Dundee City Council to film its residents than any other local authority in Scotland, a new report has revealed.

Civil liberties group Big Brother Watch discovered the council has spent more than £25,000 on 67 cameras, which are worn by parking attendants, community safety wardens, animal control officers and the investigat­ion officer on the c o u n c i l ’s o u t - o f - h o u rs service.

While the group acknowledg­es there may be valid reasons for recording evidence on body cameras, it says it fears they are often being used for trivial matters.

Big Brother Watch warns this may represent an unacceptab­le amount of intrusion into personal privacy.

The footage is kept by the council for three months if filmed by parking attendants and for 30 days if taken by animal control wardens.

The figures were released in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request, which also showed that while the council has carried out privacy impact assessment­s on the use of body cameras by community wardens, it has not done so for animal control officers or parking attendants.

The Big Brother Watch report states: “Body-worn cameras are the new tool in the surveillan­ce arsenal.

“They can be deployed for multiple purposes often with little to no evidence that they are the right tool to solve the particular problem.

“Big Brother Watch i s concerned that the rush to use body-worn cameras by local authoritie­s is not being scrutinise­d closely enough.”

The council also grants permission to carry out targeted surveillan­ce more than any other local authority in the country.

Between 2012/14 and 2015/16 it granted 147 authorisat­ions.

Edinburgh City Council, which approved the second highest number, granted only 53.

A spokesman f or t he Dundee City Council said: “The implicatio­ns of using of body-mounted cameras are always considered and as well as ensuring that people are aware are being filmed, footage is only used for statutory purposes.”

Angus Council has 26 body cameras, Fife Council 21 and Perth and Kinross Council 24.

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