UK golf resort owned by Trump summonsed for alleged privacy breach
UK golf resort owned by Trump summonsed for alleged privacy breach
Posted by John P. Bradford // November 1, 2016
US presidential candidates Aberdeenshire resort being taken to court after lawyers admit staff took images of rambler
A Scottish golf resort owned by Donald Trump is being taken to court for allegedly breaching the privacy of a rambler photographed by staff without her consent or knowledge.
The resort in Aberdeenshire was served with a court summons on Monday after Trumps Scottish lawyers admitted that two staff members took mobile phone images of Rohan Beyts while she was on the course in April.
Trump International Golf Club Scotland, owned by the Republican presidential candidate, has been ordered to appear at Edinburgh sheriff court on 22 December to respond to a civil action lodged in the small claims court by Beyts this month.
Beyts is seeking damages of up to 3,000 ($3,650) after TIGCS rejected her initial requests by letter for an apology and damages. Her civil action claims the company is guilty of a criminal offence under the UKs data protection and privacy legislation, after an investigation by the Guardian revealed the resort was in breach of the Data Protection Act.
The resort admitted it was not registered under the act with the Information Commissioners Office despite operating at least nine CCTV cameras and holding confidential records on its staff, its thousands of customers and its suppliers. It subsequently registered with the ICO in August.
In the US, meanwhile, Trump has threatened to sue any cinema that screens the documentary, Youve Been Trumped Too. Made by Anthony Baxter, the film is a sequel to Youve Been Trumped, in which Baxter was seen being forcibly arrested by police as he investigated allegations of intimidatory behaviour against the property tycoons neighbours in 2010.