A federal judge rules that the Lower Merion School District …
A federal judge rules that the Lower Merion School District …
The Lower Merion School District will have a new set of rules …
A judge has ruled the FBI can view computer evidence gathered …
Ten weeks after the controversy erupted, Lower Merion School …
The Lower Merion School District is racking up a hefty legal …
An insurance company says it won't pay to defend Lower Merion …
The attorney representing the former technology coordinator for…
District lawyers and a federal judge will discuss Wednesday …
Mark Haltzman, who represents the Lower Merion family at the …
The parents at the center of the webcam spying case in Lower …
The parents of the student who filed the lawsuit agree to delay…
Who really knew about the webcams on the Lower Merion laptops? …
An assistant vice-principal accused by a Lower Merion student …
Find out why the webcam issue named in the high-profile Lower …
The ACLU and the U.S. Attorney's Office are the latest entities…
LOWER MERION, Pa. - The Lower Merion laptop webcam spying scandal continues to make headlines.
On Wednesday, lawyers and a federal judge will talk about how to notify parents whose kids are in some of those 56,000 the district admits it captured on school-issued laptops.
The meeting comes as the criminal investigation moves forward.
On Tuesday, we heard what a school district information technology supervisor had to say after being questioned by the FBI.
Carol Cafiero said she only turned on webcams when someone from the school district told her to do so.
"At no time did I ever independently, without authorization turn on the webcam technology," Cafiero told assembled media. "At no time did I ever spy on any students."
And Cafiero's attorney, Charles Mandracchia, took aim at a remark the plaintiffs' attorney made in legal documents.
"To make the comment that he has said about, you know, her being 'a voyeur' is just, again, outrageous. I cannot say that enough. And it's salacious, and it's ludicrous," Mandracchia said.
Meanwhile, the school district's attorney told Crowley he did view all of the pictures. And assured her that none of the pictures were “salacious.”
Right now, the only picture made public is the one of a sleeping Blake Robbins.
On Tuesday night, Fox 29’s Sharon Crowley spoke to Zach Stalberg, of The Committee of Seventy. He is the parent of a senior student in Lower Merion and, like other parents, finds the news about the number of images troubling.