07 Jun 2007
A Superior Court judge has ordered a retrial in the case against a former teacher convicted of having pornographic images on her adware infected computer.
A jury convicted Julie Amero in January on four counts of 'risk of injury to a minor' because her PC displayed pop-up ads for porn sites that could be seen by her seventh-grade students. The charges carry a maximum 40-year prison sentence.
Detective Mark Lounsbury with the local police in Norwich, Connecticut had testified that Amero had intentionally surfed to the porn website.
The defence argued that the images were served by adware and spyware applications that had infected the computer.
In overturning the previous ruling, Judge Hillary Strackbein dismissed Lounsbury's testimony as "erroneous".
"The jury may have relied, at least in part, on that false information," Judge Strackbein ruled, according to a report in local news paper Norwich Bulletin. "[Amero] is entitled to a new trial in the interest of justice."
The case has generated waves on computer security blogs because of the apparent lack of computer knowledge displayed by the judge and police witnesses.
SunbeltBLOG and VitalSecurity.org both argued that Amero could not be held accountable for software that operated outside her control and without her consent.
Amero was originally scheduled for sentencing on Wednesday. She will now enter a second plea of not guilty.
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Wow
I guess the "Detective" must have gotten his credentials from a cereal box. And apparently the judge doesn't even need to have ever used one of them newfangled computer machines in order to try a computer based case.
Posted by: J Jackson 12 Sep 2007