Suit returns Pa. 'sexting' district to spotlight

May 20, 2010 By MICHAEL RUBINKAM , Associated Press Writer

(AP) -- A Pennsylvania school district that was at the center of a highly publicized "sexting" case was sued Thursday by a teenager who claims her principal confiscated her cell phone, found nude images she had taken of herself and turned it over to prosecutors.

Tunkhannock Area High School Principal Gregory Ellsworth illegally searched the 17-year-old's phone in January 2009, even though she intended the racy photos to be "seen only herself and, perhaps, her long-time boyfriend," according to the federal lawsuit.

It says the principal gave the phone to George Skumanick Jr., at the time the Wyoming County district attorney, who threatened to file felony child pornography charges against the girl unless she took a class on .

"I was absolutely horrified and humiliated to learn that school officials, men in (the) DA's office, and police had seen naked pictures of me," said the plaintiff, now 19 and identified in court documents only by the initials N.N. She graduated in 2009.

"Those pictures were extremely private and not meant for anyone else's eyes. What they did is the equivalent of spying on me through my bedroom window," she said in a statement released by the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, which is representing her.

The suit, filed in Scranton, seeks unspecified damages against Ellsworth, the district, the county, prosecutors and a detective. It also seeks the destruction of any images still in the possession of law enforcement.

District Superintendent Michael J. Healey declined to comment Thursday, saying he had not seen the suit. The district's lawyer did not immediately return a phone message, nor did Ellsworth, Skumanick or District Attorney Jeff Mitchell, who is also a defendant.

The district in rural northeastern Pennsylvania was at the center of the nation's first involving - the practice of sending explicit photos via text message - to reach a federal appeals court.

The court ruled in March that prosecutors could not criminally charge a teenage girl who appeared in a photo similar to the one involved in the latest lawsuit.

Explore further: Drones may violate international law

5 /5 (1 vote)
add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Parents oppose Philly school webcam spying lawsuit

Mar 19, 2010

(AP) -- Some suburban Philadelphia parents are seeking to halt a potential class-action lawsuit accusing their school district of using cameras in school-issued laptops to spy on students at home.

Vt. may set aside harshest penalties for 'sexting'

Apr 14, 2009

(AP) -- Parents, school districts and law enforcement have been grappling with what to do with teenagers who take sexually explicit photos of themselves with their cell phone cameras and send them to friends.

Rulings cloud issue of school MySpace suspensions

Feb 04, 2010

(AP) -- Federal appellate judges wrestling with whether schools can discipline students for Internet speech posted offsite reached different rulings Thursday in two Pennsylvania cases.

Pa. school: Webcams used only on missing laptops

Feb 19, 2010

(AP) -- A suburban Philadelphia school district accused of spying on students at home via school-issued computers told parents it only activated the webcams to find missing laptops.

Recommended for you

Drones may violate international law

19 hours ago

(Phys.org) —As President Obama gives a speech on national security—including defending U.S. use of drones to combat terrorism—Leila Sadat, JD, international law expert and professor of law at Washington University in ...

Text in on smarter phones

May 22, 2013

Alternative input methods for smart phones, such as Swype and SwiftKey, offer substantial benefits to users and are comparable with common typing speeds found on computer keyboards, according to a report published by researchers ...

AP probe further strains Obama, press rapport

May 20, 2013

Reports emerged last week that the Department of Justice had secretly obtained two months' worth of phone records of journalists at The Associated Press as part of a larger investigation into a failed al-Qaida ...

User comments : 2

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

gunslingor1
5 / 5 (2) May 20, 2010
GOOD JOB GIRL, don't let this go unpunished. Absolutely obserd what they did to her.

You can't take naked pictures of yourself "period", even though you see your self naked in the mirror every morning. next thing you know, its gonna be illegal for people under the age to have a mirror.

Besides, shes right; we don't want teenagers to take nude picture because we don't want their lives to be ruined by dispersing the photo's, nor do we want child porn floating out there.

Yet, if "the law" gets there hands on them and all these people see them, what the hell are we accomplishing?

Hell, I would be surprised if some perverted cop or principle is going around checking phones just so he can see and maybe even steal naked pictures.
LuckyBrandon
not rated yet May 21, 2010
yea but honestly, in a lot of states, the age of 17 is not considered to be a minor for females (although things like buying cigarettes still go by 18)...
my point being, how in the world can they call it child pornography anyways...that's barely legal pornography if anything...

More news stories

Google eyes emerging markets networks

Google has become deeply involved in a series of projects to build and operate wireless networks in emerging markets including sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, a report said Friday.

Facial-recognition technology proves its mettle

(Phys.org) —In a study that evaluated some of the latest in automatic facial recognition technology, researchers at Michigan State University were able to quickly identify one of the Boston Marathon bombing ...

Drones may violate international law

(Phys.org) —As President Obama gives a speech on national security—including defending U.S. use of drones to combat terrorism—Leila Sadat, JD, international law expert and professor of law at Washington University in ...

The long road to the 2000-watt society

The vision of a society in which each inhabitant of the earth manages to consume only 2000 watts has already been around for 15 years. During this time, there has been a steady increase in environmental awareness ...

Galaxies fed by funnels of fuel

(Phys.org) —Computer simulations of galaxies growing over billions of years have revealed a likely scenario for how they feed: a cosmic version of swirly straws.