Tempo

Sexting scandal sweeps US high school

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A massive sexting ring is rocking a high school in Colorado, with at least 100 students trading nude pictures and posting them on social media, news reports said Friday.

Some of the kids in the photograph­s were as young as 12, and included eighth graders from the middle school, The New York Times reported.

The students, many of whom are on the football team at Canon City High School, could now face criminal charges, reports said.

The school district announced Wednesday that “a number of our students have engaged in behavior where they take and pass along pictures of themselves that expose private parts of their bodies or their undergarme­nts.”

Noting that a “large number” of the high school football team players were implicated in the scandal, the district said it was canceling the high school’s last football game of the season.

“Because we can’t guarantee that every kid we put out on the field would be clean of this circumstan­ce, we would just rather not put a team out at all,” Canon City Schools Superinten­dent George Welsh told NBC television affiliate KOAA.

Noting it first learned of the behavior on Monday based on anonymous tips and student reports, the district stressed that taking a picture of yourself showing a naked private body part and sending it to another person was a felony.

The same applies if receiving such a picture and forwarding it to another person, or receiving such a picture and retaining possession of it over time.

According to The New York Times, police and the district attorney’s office are weighing whether to file child pornograph­y charges – including felony charges – against some of the participan­ts.

Students circulated up to 400 lewd photograph­s, it added.

Students used password-protected “phone vaults,” apps that often appear to be simple calculator­s at first glance, to hide the photos from their parents and school officials.

“It’s been going on for years,” one Canon City student told KRDO13, an affiliate of ABC television.

The student said some fellow students, especially girls, had been pressured to take pictures of themselves.

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