Post by fish on Nov 30, 2022 19:57:05 GMT 12
The NZSIS will pay Nicky Hager $66,400 in compensation and legal fees after it illegally took his phone records in 2012.
The SIS had suspected Hager was illegally given information by a member of the Defence Force for his 2011 book Other People's Wars - which raised the possibility of civilian casualties in Operation Burnham.
It seized two months' worth of his home phone's metadata, aiming to track down the NZDF member.
However, in 2019 the Acting Inspector General of Intelligence and Security found the SIS had no reasonable grounds for suspecting espionage, and failed to show the necessary caution for investigating a journalist's source in a free and democratic society.
The phone data showed no link between Hager and the suspected NZDF member. It was found to be a breach of Hager's privacy.
"Mr Hager had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his home telephone, and NZSIS now accepts that it acted unlawfully in obtaining that data," a public statement by the SIS, dated 22 November said.
"Accordingly, NZSIS apologises unreservedly for breaching Mr Hager's rights. Its conduct fell short of its own expectations."
The settlement was conditional on the SIS publishing an assurance it did not share the data with any third parties, it would delete Hager's data within two months, and the statements it made were true and accurate.
The documents were signed by Hager and SIS director Rebecca Kitteridge, who is due to leave the role to take up a position as deputy public service commissioner from March.
The settlement out of court agreed Hager would be paid $40,000 in compensation, along with $26,400 in legal fees.
In a written statement, Hager said he was pleased with the result but more needed to be done to prevent illegal actions by the SIS and others.
www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/479816/nzsis-agrees-to-pay-nicky-hager-66-400-over-phone-records-privacy-breach
The SIS had suspected Hager was illegally given information by a member of the Defence Force for his 2011 book Other People's Wars - which raised the possibility of civilian casualties in Operation Burnham.
It seized two months' worth of his home phone's metadata, aiming to track down the NZDF member.
However, in 2019 the Acting Inspector General of Intelligence and Security found the SIS had no reasonable grounds for suspecting espionage, and failed to show the necessary caution for investigating a journalist's source in a free and democratic society.
The phone data showed no link between Hager and the suspected NZDF member. It was found to be a breach of Hager's privacy.
"Mr Hager had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his home telephone, and NZSIS now accepts that it acted unlawfully in obtaining that data," a public statement by the SIS, dated 22 November said.
"Accordingly, NZSIS apologises unreservedly for breaching Mr Hager's rights. Its conduct fell short of its own expectations."
The settlement was conditional on the SIS publishing an assurance it did not share the data with any third parties, it would delete Hager's data within two months, and the statements it made were true and accurate.
The documents were signed by Hager and SIS director Rebecca Kitteridge, who is due to leave the role to take up a position as deputy public service commissioner from March.
The settlement out of court agreed Hager would be paid $40,000 in compensation, along with $26,400 in legal fees.
In a written statement, Hager said he was pleased with the result but more needed to be done to prevent illegal actions by the SIS and others.
www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/479816/nzsis-agrees-to-pay-nicky-hager-66-400-over-phone-records-privacy-breach