The Reporter (Vacaville)

Mayor sues after finding tracking device

- By Gabe Stern

RENO, NEV. >> Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve is suing a private investigat­or and his company after finding a device attached to her vehicle that was capable of tracking its real-time location. The lawsuit, first reported by The Nevada Independen­t on Thursday, alleges that the investigat­or trespassed onto her property to install the device without her consent. It Schieve says she was unaware until a mechanic noticed it while working on her vehicle. The complaint says, further, that the investigat­or was working on behalf of an “unidentifi­ed third party” whose identity she has not been able to ascertain. “The tracking and surveillan­ce of Schieve caused her, as it would cause any reasonable person, significan­t fear and distress,” it reads. There was no immediate response to a request for comment emailed Friday by The Associated Press to David McNeely, the investigat­or alleged to have placed the tracking device, and 5 Alpha Industries, the company. Schieve, who filed the lawsuit in Washoe County's Second Judicial Court as a private citizen, was elected last month to her third term as mayor, a position she has held since 2014. She is seeking restitutio­n for invasion of privacy, trespassin­g, civil conspiracy and negligence, as well as attorney's costs. She also is seeking to know who hired the investigat­or. The mayor said in an interview with The Nevada Independen­t that the mechanic found the tracking device about two weeks before the vote. She brought it to police in neighborin­g Sparks, and they were able to determine that it had been purchased by McNeely. “I am publicly announcing this now, and did not make any public statements at the time when it was discovered, to make clear that this is about one thing, and one thing only: it is not OK to stalk people,” Schieve said in a statement to AP. A spokespers­on for the mayor said Schieve went to the Sparks department rather than Reno police in order to “keep clear of any conflict of interest questions.” The complaint also alleges, without offering additional evidence, that the company “installed similar tracking devices on other vehicles of multiple other prominent community members.”

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