NEWS

Outrageous Porn Pop-Up Case In Connecticut Is Over

Written by Ed Dickson
Published November 23, 2008

If there were ever a modern case that could be compared to the Salem witch trials, it would be the effort to prosecute Julie Amero, a Norwich, Connecticut school teacher, for (allegedly) exposing her students to pornography.

Julie was convicted on four counts of exposing kids to pornography after she turned on a spyware-infested (school-owned) machine and a flurry of porn pop-ups began appearing on the screen. Julie, who was merely a substitute teacher, didn't know what to do and the teenagers in her class witnessed the event.

Even worse, the school district had let their content filtering software expire. Computer experts later discovered the spyware infestation was caused by someone accessing a hairdressing site. Presumably, this site was accessed by a student, who wasn't aware of the spyware and didn't know the school district had let their content filtering expire.

On Friday, Alex Eckelberry, CEO of Sunbelt Software, announced that the Amero nightmare is over in his popular Sunbelt Blog. Sadly though, she still had to plead to a misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct. The result was a $100 fine and she has had her teaching credentials revoked in Connecticut.

Considering in the initial trial she was facing a conviction on four felony counts — which could have netted her 40 years in the slammer — I suppose this is a win?

"She acquiesced to the lesser misdemeanor charge, and while it may have been a bitter pill to swallow, she can at least can move on now without this sick cloud hanging over her head. It was less than two years ago that Julie was facing felony charges with a maximum of 40 years in prison," according to Alex Eckelberry,

Alex and a host of people from the computer security industry, along with a pro bono attorney, William Dow, led the effort to expose this injustice and get Julie a new trial. The number of people who got involved in this is amazing and many of them are mentioned in Alex's blog post.

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Having worked around financial crimes for a number of years, I noticed they seemed to be on the rise. One reason for this is technology, which grows more rapidly than laws designed to protect us from it. Although the blog is a resource to educate people on identity theft, it also strives to educate the common person on the rapidly growing problem of crimes enabled (made too easy) by technology and the Internet.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!

Comments

#1 — November 23, 2008 @ 18:57PM — Mark Buckingham [URL]

Truly a sad case of justice being utterly too blind. Apparently, the computer in question was never even checked for malware by the original investigating team. Seriously...WTF?

It'd be great if those actually responsible (supposedly kids surfing the Web while teachers were out of the room) would step forward and at least accept some of their responsibility, maybe even apologize for ruining someone's life.

#2 — November 24, 2008 @ 06:40AM — Brian aka Guppusmaximus

This is f*cking retarded! It's not like we live in the freakin 80's. Computers are a commodity & it's a shame that these supposed law officials don't understand a thing about'em. The school should have suffered some consequences NOT the teacher! They own the computers, ultimately, it's their responsibility for what is on those harddrives as well as what sites can be accessed via the net!

If we didn't make sex & the human body such a vulgarity in this country then we wouldn't have these problems. Yet, we have no problems making violence readily available via TV,Movies,Video games...

#3 — November 25, 2008 @ 00:21AM — Sue

Why does she not sue the school and school board. They were responsible for ensuring that the software was up to date, but were incompetent. It is this woman's life and reputation that has gotten damaged.

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