Loss of Privacy

Keeping you informed on recent losses to privacy and civil rights worldwide.

Browsing Posts tagged children

Pedophiles and those who “supposedly” possess child porn are the new communists as the world has entered a new “McCarthy” era. Merely being accused is ruining people’s lives and careers while others jump the gun, declaring people guilty before all the evidence can be collected.

One such case is the story of Ting-Yi Oei, a 60-year-old assistant principal at Freedom High School in South Riding, Virginia. It all started when rumors flew about students sending one another naked pictures of each other on their cell phones. Known as sexting, several teenagers across the country are participating. Oei was asked to check it out. Oei found a student who had the photo and showed it to him.

The image depicted only the torso of a girl — later determined to be a 17-year old student — wearing only underpants, her arms mostly covering her breasts. The boy claimed he didn’t know who sent him the photo or who the girl was.

Oei says he showed the image to his boss, Principal Christine Forester, who told him to preserve a copy on his office computer for the investigation. A computer neophyte, Oei didn’t know how to transfer the image from the boy’s cell phone,  so the teen sent the picture to Oei’s phone,  and told him how to forward it to his work e-mail address. When the process was complete, Oei instructed the student to delete the image from his phone.

More students were investigated, but the identity of the girl in the photo was not discovered at that time. It was concluded that the girl probably wasn’t a student at the school. Oei informed the principal of his findings and the matter was closed.

Two weeks later, the boy caught with the photo was in trouble again — he’d pulled down the pants of a girl in class. The school suspended the student for 10 days. But when the boy’s mother learned from Oei about the earlier photo incident, she was outraged that Oei hadn’t reported the picture to her. She called his house at 7:00 a.m., screaming at him that the suspension had to be revoked.

Oei refused, so the mother called the police to report the incident of the photo. The police had to help Oei retrieve the photo from his phone and learned that the girl was indeed a student at the school.

A month later, the first charges were filed against Oei: failure to report suspicion of child abuse, a misdemeanor. The charge alleged that Oei had a legal duty to report the girl’s photo to her parents, and to state agencies or law enforcement.

How is Oei supposed to report the photo to the girl’s parents if he was unable to identify the girl?  And why is a pissed off mother allowed to destroy a man’s career just because she’s angry at school officials for disciplining her son?

The photo didn’t show sexual activity or genitalia, and even the sheriff’s office conceded it was “inappropriate” but not “criminal” — making it unclear what the “child abuse” was supposed to be. In any event, as a matter of law, Oei was only required to report suspected abuse to his principal, which he’d done.

The principal didn’t defend Oei in the case. Oei did what he should have done, but it was the principal who dropped the ball. Unfortunately for Oei, the prosecutor in the case, James Plowman, decided to proceed with the case. Politically motivated, Plowman wanted to be tough on crime and was going to make an example of Oei. When Oei refused to resign, Plowman changed the misdemeanor charge into a felony charge. Oei’s life then became a nightmare.

“We had to tell all our friends when they sent us e-mail that police could seize computers at any time so anything they wrote us could be accessed,” Curling says. “Any phone call they made to us could be recorded.”

Oei suffered the usual humiliation of someone who was arrested on child porn charges. He endured and, with the help of many, he continued to fight.

Then last month, Oei’s defense attorney, Steven Stone, filed a motion to dismiss the charges on the grounds that the photo didn’t constitute child pornography. In a ruling on Tuesday, Loudoun Circuit Court Judge Thomas Horne agreed. Citing a long history of state appeals court decisions, Horne noted that nudity alone is not enough to qualify an image as child pornography. The image must be “sexually explicit” and “lewd.”

Plowman still contends that Oei was wrong and should not be in the education profession. Oei, who was able to keep his job and his pay throughout the ordeal, isn’t sure he wants to return to a school where the principal won’t back him up, but he is also stuck with the reality that no one else will want to hire him. Though the charges were dropped, a google search will turn up his name, likely preventing him from finding work elsewhere.

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A mom let her 10 year old son walk, in broad daylight, to his soccer practice 1/3 mile away from home.  It was a route they’d driven many times before.  He’d walked around the neighborhood many times before.

I had to be at the field myself 15 minutes after practice started, so I gave him my cell phone and told him I would be there to check that he made it and sent him off. He got 3 blocks and a police car intercepted him. The police came to my house — after I had left — and spoke with my younger children (who were home with Grandma). They then found me at the soccer field and proceeded to tell me how I could be charged with child endangerment. They said they had gotten “hundreds” of calls to 911 about him walking.

The rampant hysteria that everyone seems to be possessed with today is appalling.  While we should ensure the safety of our children, there is no need to be so over-protective that children can no longer be children.  Fortunately, this mother spoke with the chief of police and received an apology, but it never should have gotten that far.

You can read more at Free Range Kids.

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The United Kingdom is still competing with the United States in idiocy by fingerprinting six year olds who arrive and are not EU citizens.  The United States fingerprints anyone over 14.  Apparently, no one in the UK even knew this was a law.

At the time Jacqui Smith was congratulated for her tough line on issuing identity cards to foreign residents and no one, not even parliament, noticed that the biometric requirements applied to children of six. And parliament didn’t know because it was never asked to approve the policy.

When asked why (question 226407), the Home Office itself offers a much more solid defence: that the EU requires it. What it does not admit is that the British government is almost alone in pushing the EU to ensure that the age when fingerprinting can start is so low. Home Office officials pushed the EU to establish a standard age of six, despite opposition within other European governments. The next time you hear a government official support the EU, it is not just because it is a vehicle for “peace, prosperity and freedom”, but also because it is a vehicle to push through policies that the UK government would prefer not to pursue through the legislature at home.

Fingerprinting children is double-plus good.

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