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On Sept. 19, Ravi tweeted: "Roommate asked for room until midnight. I went into molly's room and turned on my webcam. I saw him making out with a dude. Yay." Two days later, he said this: "Anyone with iChat, I dare you to video chat me between the hours of 9:30 and 12. Yes, it's happening again." Authorities say Ravi failed in an attempt that time to spy on his roommate. In a gay-themed chatroom, a poster who appears to have been Clementi said he unplugged Ravi's computer and searched for hidden cameras before a liaison that night. The applicable state invasion-of-privacy law, adopted in 2003 as a sex offense, appears to be seldom used. There have been no legal cases in which judges have further interpreted it. The law differentiates between a third-degree crime, which could carry a five-year prison term, and a fourth-degree crime, punishable by no more than 18 months in prison for first-time offenders. Prosecutors have not specified which degree Ravi and Wei are charged with. The less serious fourth-degree crime could be committed if someone who is unauthorized to do so merely observes a sexual act
-- or in a situation where "reasonable person would know that another may expose intimate parts or may engage in sexual penetration or sexual contact," Loughry said. To prove the third-degree crime, though, would be harder. To be convicted someone would have to see nudity or sexual contact
-- and would have to record it. If the defense lawyers are correct, Loughry said, that could be hard for prosecutors to prove. No lawsuits have been filed, though Clementi's parents do have a lawyer. John Bazzurro, a lawyer in West Long Branch, said he believes that Clementi's family could file a claim for privacy invasion whether or not Wei and Ravi witnessed any sexual contact or disseminated the video. Sean Morrissey, managing director of Katana Forensics, a computer forensics software firm based in Easton, Md., said that a video session on Apple's iChat can be between only two parties, and that the video would not be saved. And while prosecutors have not said how far the video went, it's possible
-- but very uncommon -- to use "third-party software" from another company to disseminate a live video more widely, Morrissey said. Bill Dobbs, a longtime New York City gay rights activist, said he worries about "armchair prosecution" as people call for more serious charges against Ravi and Wei without knowing all the facts. But there's value in the social discussion that has come out of the case, he said. "The bigger conversation's very important because that's part of efforts to get at the truth," he said. "What actually led to him committing suicide?"
[Associated
Press;
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