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The church disputes this, saying only seven or eight people were present for the Good Friday service — including the priest and altar servers — as its services are broadcast online. A livestream of the service, broadcast on another church’s YouTube account, shows eight participants.

The woman said the AHS inspector told her she included her name because she believed she was a member of the church, which, if true, could have been more serious.

“I think it’s bad enough, and I feel kind of violated enough, but what if this were to happen where somebody potentially does try to get retribution?” she said. “Her excuse … it actually seemed to make it worse. That does not make this better in any way, shape, or form.”

The woman asked to speak to the inspector’s supervisor, who she says told her the privacy breach wasn’t serious, and her name and email aren’t private information.

“I was expecting, like, ‘Oh, I don’t know how this happened. We’ll make sure it doesn’t happen again,’ but just being blown off and (saying) ‘well, that’s not private.’ … I asked him at that point, so is it your policy to include that information to the people who had a complaint made against them? … I think he realized that he had said something incorrect, because he (said), ‘Well, I’m just trying to have a conversation.’ ”

Case will be reviewed

AHS spokesman Kerry Williamson says including the name and contact information of the person who made the complaint in the email was a mistake.