Former Pennsylvania professor sued by
child pornography victims
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[December 29, 2016]
By David DeKok
HARRISBURG, Pa. (Reuters) - Eight women who
appeared as children in illegal pornography have sued a former
Pennsylvania college professor, saying they are owed damages because he
owned and traded images of them being sexually abused.
The women, who are given pseudonyms in the lawsuit, accuse Kirk Nesset,
a former English and creative writing professor at Allegheny College in
Meadville, of harming them by possessing and trading their pornographic
images.
“Victims of child pornography are constantly aware that their child sex
abuse images will never disappear,” lawyers Carol Hepburn of Seattle and
Katie Shipp of New York, who represent the women, wrote in the complaint
filed last week in U.S. District Court in Erie.
Victims "will be repeatedly victimized by individuals like the defendant
who endlessly participate in the market for child sex abuse images,”
they said.
Michael Bruzzese, a Pittsburgh lawyer who represented Nesset at his
criminal trial, did not respond to a request for comment.
The victims were identified on a computer database maintained by the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, according to the
lawsuit.
Nesset was on the Allegheny College faculty for two decades and was a
renowned poet, critic, and writer of short stories. His collection
“Paradise Road” won the 2007 Drue Heinz Literature Prize of the
University of Pittsburgh. He resigned from the college after his arrest
in 2014.
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FBI agents in Arizona traced a transaction in child pornography on
the BitTorrent file-sharing network to his computer, according to
court papers. A search warrant for his home in Meadville uncovered
more than a half-million illegal pornographic images on an external
hard drive.
Nesset confessed to the crimes, telling the Federal Bureau of
Investigation that while he owned pornographic images of children of
all ages, he preferred those of girls aged 10-13 years.
He is presently serving six years and four months in the federal
prison in Lompoc, California.
Federal child pornography law provides for statutory damages of
$150,000 per victim, but Hepburn said the victims are also seeking
compensatory and punitive damages for the physical and psychological
harm they suffered.
“In experiences like this, they suffer from paranoia and
hyper-vigilance,” Hepburn said. “It causes wear and tear on the body
and can exacerbate underlying medical conditions."
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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