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School sued over hidden
cameras |
Associated Press July 2, 2003
A TENNESSEE school allowed security cameras to film children undressing
in locker rooms and then stored the images on a computer accessible
through the Internet, according to a lawsuit filed by a group of
angry parents.
The lawsuit filed last week in the federal court in Nashville seeks
$US4.2 million in damages.
The parents contend the school system violated students' rights
by putting hidden cameras in boys and girls locker rooms at Livingston
Middle School. The cameras reportedly captured students, aged between
10-14, in various stages of undress.
"The parents have been devastated by the conduct of the school
officials, by the videotaping and by the breach of trust,"
attorney Mark Chalos, who represents the parents of 16 girls and
one boy, said.
Chuck Cagle, lawyer for Overton County Schools, said he would not
comment because he had not read the lawsuit.
EduTech Inc, the company that installed the surveillance cameras
in several Overton County schools, also was named in the lawsuit.
Officials with the company had no comment.
Parents learned of the cameras when a student reported a suspicious
device in the school at Livingston, about 130km east of Nashville.
The lawsuit contends that images, captured by the cameras and stored
on a hard drive in the office of the assistant principal, could
be accessed from remote computers by the Internet. It claims the
computer's password security had not been changed from the factory
default setting.
The images were reportedly accessed 98 times between July 2002
and January 2003 - sometimes late at night and early in the morning
- and through Internet providers in Tennessee and South Carolina.
William Needham, director of Overton County Schools, said the assistant
principal has been transferred to another school in the system.
Chalos said he did not know if the cameras were still operating.
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