Scottish tourist makes harrowing discovery at Airbnb apartment in Toronto — a hidden camera in a clock
National Post
Nick Feris
10 September 2018
A Scottish tourist vacationing in Canada suggests people should
consider refraining from booking accommodations through Airbnb after he
found a video camera concealed in a digital clock at an apartment he
rented in Toronto last week.
Toronto police and Airbnb are investigating the harrowing discovery
Dougie Hamilton says he made last Thursday, shortly after he and his
girlfriend arrived at the rented condo in the city’s downtown core. The
two were excited to decompress in the “lovely apartment” after a busy
day, the 34-year-old from Glasgow wrote in a public Facebook post over
the weekend, only to be shaken by what they found on a table in the
living room.
“If you use Airbnb, then you’ll definitely want to read this and
possibly stop using them,” Hamilton wrote, before asking the reader to
bear with him “as I take you on a journey!”
Hamilton says he was lounging on the couch while his girlfriend went to
buy coffee at Starbucks when he noticed the clock facing in his
direction. Weeks earlier, he had watched an online video that detailed
how small cameras can now be embedded in all sorts of everyday objects,
from pens to buttons to teddy bears’ eyes. The memory triggered in him
a burning curiosity to check if the clock contained a “spy camera.”
After fighting off the impulse for several minutes, Hamilton wrote, he
stood up to probe the clock just as his girlfriend walked through the
front door. A series of photos Hamilton posted to Facebook appear to
show him removing the clock’s clear front casing, a process that
revealed a hidden camera lens on the left-hand side of the device.
“It could see everything. We didn’t know if the owner had been
watching,” Hamilton told the Daily Record, a Scottish newspaper. “We’re
innocent-minded people, but the clock was facing where our bed was and
we thought it might be for something more sinister like a sex ring.”
Toronto police confirmed Monday that they were in touch with Hamilton
late last week. Det. Ken Lee, an officer assigned to the case, said the
force’s investigation remains ongoing. He added that police have yet to
interview the owner of the apartment, which he said is located
“somewhere in and around King St. West,” a major commercial street that
cuts through Toronto’s fashion and entertainment districts.
Lindsey Scully, a spokesperson for Airbnb, said the company refunded
Hamilton for his stay and removed the host who rented him the apartment
from its platform pending the outcome of an internal investigation.
“We take privacy issues extremely seriously and have a zero tolerance
policy for this behaviour,” Scully said in an email. “Airbnb hosts must
fully disclose whether there are security cameras or other surveillance
equipment at or around the listing and get consent where required.
Cameras are never allowed in bathrooms or bedrooms.”
Hamilton did not respond to an interview request on Monday. He told the
Daily Record that he would continue staying at Airbnb properties for
the duration of his trip, albeit with an extra degree of caution.
“I’ll be giving the room a quick scan when I check in,” he said.
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