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Three other witnesses, all Rutgers students, followed Chung on the stand. Altman asked each if they knew Ravi to speak against gays. All said he didn't. But one, Cassandra Cicco, said Ravi told her that he streamed the video to see whether Clementi was gay
-- as he suspected. "He said he didn't have any problem with homosexuals and in fact he had a really good friend who was homosexual," Cicco said. She said she and a group of a half-dozen students were shown a one-second snippet of streaming video. She wanted to see it, she said, out of curiosity. She said that there were two men in the view and at least one had his shirt off. "Someone pressed `end' on the feed and it ended abruptly and we're like, that happened," she said. Another student who lived in the dorm said Ravi told him he'd seen Clementi with another man on his webcam. "It was pretty crazy and scandalous," Alvin Artha said. "He described the guy he invited over as older. And that was more the scandalous part than that he had invited another male." The case was so well known that it took four days to seat a jury of 16 -- including four alternates. Just before opening statements, one more juror was excused after telling the judge that he needed to change an answer he'd given in a questionnaire.
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