No right to privacy when fraudulent activity suspected

In City and Council of Swansea v Gayle, the Council started to

In City and Council of Swansea v Gayle, the Council started to conduct covert video surveillance on Gayle following information received from two co-workers that he had been seen playing squash at a sports centre on 29 July and 26 August 2010, when he should have been working. The surveillance confirmed that he subsequently played squash at the sports centre on five successive Thursdays at times when he was claiming to have been at work.

The EAT upheld the employer’s appeal against the tribunal’s decision that the dismissal had been unfair because the investigation had been ‘too thorough’ and the use of covert surveillance breached human rights. First, when considering the scope of the investigation, it is never likely, if ever it could be, that an investigation will be held unreasonable because it is too thorough. Secondly, Article 8 of the Convention of Human Rights, the right to respect for private and family life, was never engaged. The photography was of Gayle outside the sports centre, in a public place. In addition, Gayle “was a fraudster”; he was engaged in his own affairs while being paid by his employer and a person in such circumstances can have no reasonable expectation that their conduct is entitled to privacy.

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