A former Gold Coast bikini model who filed a simple Freedom of Information request discovered her personal file had been accessed by Queensland police officers more than 1400 times.

Renee Eaves, a self-styled social justice campaigner with a history of run-ins with Queensland police, claimed she will now take legal action over breaches to her personal privacy.

The former Miss Bikini World contestant believes she has been targeted because of her crusade against police brutality.

In 2011 Ms Eaves won a pay-out over an unlawful arrest case against a police officer, The Gold Coast Bulletin reports.

It was a bitter legal dispute, with allegations of harassment, multiple traffic stops and behaviour bordering on stalking, that rumbled on for years.

Ms Eaves, who was pregnant at the time, said the stress caused her son to be born eight weeks premature.

Last month the 39-year-old lodged an FOI to view her personal QPRIME file - a dossier comprised of intelligence and information collected by police.

Ms Eaves was motivated to check because she had wanted to remove an official flag against her name - a marker she said indicated to police that she was a "smart alec looking for trouble".

Ms Eaves won a payout just shy of $100,000 over an unlawful arrest case in 2011.

What she found shocked her: police had opened her QPRIME file a massive 1435 times since 2006.

It would be extremely unusual to access a citizen's QPRIME file more than 50 times in a decade, Ms Eaves claims she was told by experienced police officers.

In a long statement on her personal website that details her troubled relationship with Queensland law enforcement, Ms Eaves claimed she is not "anti-police".

"I have been extremely vocal in the media and I have brought a lot of attention to a problem that keeps being swept under the rug," she wrote.

Ms Eaves' long-running dispute with Queensland police dates back to 2004, when her vehicle was stopped by Constable Barry John Donelly, according to The Daily Telegraph .

Constable Donelly pulled over Ms Eaves and for more than an hour spoke to her about her personal and professional life, court records show.

That random police stop sparked a wave of harassment, with Constable Donelly intercepting her on 15 to 20 occasions between May 2004 and March 2006, according to Ms Eaves' statement of claim.

Ms Eaves has now written to QPS Ethical Standards Command demanding an explanation about activity on her QPRIME file.

She would be taking action against 1000 officers, according to a June 18 post on her Facebook page.