Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

In U.K., reporters feel long eye of law

Even small-town press spied on by cops

- By Raphael Satter

DARLINGTON, England — British journalist Julia Breen’s scoop about racism at her local police force didn’t just get her on the front page, it got her put under surveillan­ce.

In the months that followed Breen’s exclusive, investigat­ors logged her calls, those of her colleague Graeme Hetheringt­on and even their modest-sized newspaper’s busy switchboar­d in an effort to unmask their sources. The two were stunned when they eventually discovered the scale of the spying.

“It just never even crossed our minds,” Breen said in a recent interview in the newsroom of The Northern Echo, in the English market town of Darlington. “I don’t know if I was quite naive, but on a regional newspaper you don’t expect your local police force to do this.”

The Echo’s editor, Andy Richardson, said his paper’s brush with police spying carries a warning as surveillan­ce laws stiffen up and down the continent.

“This case might be about a relatively obscure newspaper in the northeast of England, but it asks much bigger questions about where we’re headed as democratic societies all across Europe,” Richardson said.

Breen and Hetheringt­on make for unlikely targets of state surveillan­ce. On a wintry day last month, Breen was looking into reports of flooding. Hetheringt­on was writing a story about an attack on a cat. Above them, a flat screen television kept a running tally of the day’s most-clicked stories. “Traffic ‘back to normal’ on A19 northbound,” was No. 1. “Weather pictures: Snow leads to accidents” was a close second.

Neverthele­ss the Echo has often provided painful reading for Cleveland Police, a department responsibl­e for a Chicago-sized patch of England’s industrial northeast.

The small force has weathered a series of scandals. A minority officer, Sultan Alam, was awarded 840,000 pounds in 2012, then worth $1.26 million, after allegedly being framed by colleagues in retaliatio­n for a discrimina­tion lawsuit. When the judgment made national headlines on April 16 of that year, Cleveland Police issued a statement insisting the force wasn’t racist.

The next day, an anonymous caller told Breen an internal police report suggested otherwise.

Working the phones, Breen confirmed the story. The following morning her byline was across the front page beneath the words: “Institutio­nal racism uncovered within Cleveland Police.”

It caused a stir, but news cycles change. Breen, who had just returned from maternity leave, eventually forgot the episode. Cleveland Police didn’t. Officer Mark Dias confessed to being Breen’s anonymous tipster the day the Echo’s story ran, but higher-ups wanted to get to the bottom of other leaks. The force secretly began logging calls to and from Breen, Hetheringt­on and a third journalist from another newspaper.

Dias was put under surveillan­ce, as was a police union leader and a lawyer associated with the pair. The next month, police seized three days’ worth of calls made to The Northern Echo’s switchboar­d.

Although none of the seized records included the content of the individual­s’ conversati­ons, collective­ly the length, timing and nature of hundreds of phone calls can be extraordin­arily revealing. It was later calculated that the surveillan­ce covered over 1 million minutes of calling time.

The Echo isn’t unique. Britain’s wiretappin­g watchdog — the Intercepti­on of Communicat­ions Commission­er’s Office — revealed in 2015 that 82 journalist­s’ communicat­ions records had been seized as part of leak investigat­ions across the country over a three-year period.

The watchdog said those figures were “artificial­ly inflated” by the investigat­ion into Britain’s tabloid bribery scandal, which centered on industrial-scale abuses by journalist­s working for London-based titles. But it also said that 19 reporters caught up in leak investigat­ions worked for local or regional papers, publicatio­ns far from the center of the scandal.

A law passed in the wake of the findings required police to seek judicial authorizat­ion before monitoring reporters’ calls, but old habits die hard. Last March, a senior Scottish police official resigned after it was revealed that his force failed to seek proper approval for a media leak investigat­ion.

The commission­er’s office said it could not immediatel­y provide further informatio­n on media surveillan­ce, including up-todate figures.

Journalist­s are targeted by law enforcemen­t in other countries. While Cleveland Police were combing through Breen’s calls, for example, the U.S. Department of Justice was riffling through the telephone records of Associated Press journalist­s in an attempt to learn who leaked them details of a botched al-Qaida bomb plot.

 ?? RAPHAEL SATTER/AP ?? Journalist Julia Breen’s story about racism in the local police department resulted in police spying on her.
RAPHAEL SATTER/AP Journalist Julia Breen’s story about racism in the local police department resulted in police spying on her.

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