The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

‘Jealous’ stalker husband is jailed

- ROSS GARDINER

Astalker who set up a camera in his wife’s alarm clock and paid another man to spy on her has been jailed for more than a year.

Auchterard­er man Scott Ennis, 50, was sentenced to 16 months and issued with a non-harassment order after a campaign of stalking which spanned four years.

He was convicted at Perth Sheriff Court in April, having taken extreme measures to try to find out if his wife Louisa was having an affair.

Ennis installed covert monitoring devices at his Perthshire home, taped his wife’s work conversati­ons and paid one of his own workers to shadow her.

An alarm clock he had given his wife as a gift had a camera installed and he also bugged her desk at her workplace, which she shared with him and the man he suspected of having a relationsh­ip with her.

The campaign began 10 years into his marriage and after his stalking campaign unravelled, the relationsh­ip crumbled.

Sheriff Wood told Ennis his actions had caused his now ex-wife “a great deal of anxiety” and he had no option but jail him for his “despicable” campaign.

He also told father-oftwo Ennis he had been “gaslightin­g” his former partner.

“It beggars belief that you would have done that to your wife,” he said.

“Even when you were confronted, you denied that you were spying on her.”

Ennis began spying when he suspected his wife was cheating on him with David Welsh, a partner in his used car business Roundal Group in Tullibardi­ne.

His victim had no idea what was going on until she spotted a mystery device showing up on her Wifi router and discovered it was her husband’s spy camera.

She realised live footage of their bedroom was being streamed from the bedside digital alarm clock her husband had given her.

Ennis was also using mobile phone technology to covertly track his wife’s movements as his campaign ran from January 1 2015 until August 2 2019.

Fiscal depute Gail Russell told the court the decadelong marriage was failing and Mrs Ennis did start a new relationsh­ip with Mr Welsh in 2019 after leaving her husband.

The court previously heard Ennis’s employee Adam Horton had come forward to admit the part he had played because he was ashamed of what he had agreed to do.

Mr Horton was sent in a van to take video and check Mrs Ennis’s home address, as well as monitor her phone number and Whatsapp activity.

The defendant’s solicitor Ryan Sloan told the court Ennis felt regret, remorse and shame and had been struggling to come to terms with his failing marriage when he began his stealthy intrusions.

Mr Sloan said: “He was a man struggling to cope with the gradual decline of his marriage.

“It had clearly driven him to a state of extreme jealousy.”

He added it had never been Ennis’s intention for his wife to discover his clandestin­e equipment.

Ennis admitted installing a covert camera and recording device to watch and listen to his wife’s movements and conversati­ons without her knowledge, as well as to tracking her using iphone software, moving items in her garden, and getting his employee to walk past her home to record her in the company of Mr Welsh.

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 ??  ?? ‘DESPICABLE’ CAMPAIGN: Scott Ennis admitted stalking his wife for four years, including using a camera installed in her bedside alarm clock.
‘DESPICABLE’ CAMPAIGN: Scott Ennis admitted stalking his wife for four years, including using a camera installed in her bedside alarm clock.

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