Techies, this just came across the wire.  The Philadelphia school district that 
made the news earlier this year settled out of court for more than $600,000 
even though all parties were cleared of any wrongdoing.

School District Settles WebcamGate
Settlement worth more than $600,000
By DAN 
STAMM<http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/results/?keywords=%22DAN+STAMM%22&author=y&sort=date>
Updated 8:48 AM EDT, Tue, Oct 12, 2010

Lower Merion School District has settled the webcam case that made national 
headlines after students accused school officials of 
spying<http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/tech/FBI-Launches-Criminal-Investigation-into-Webcam-Spying-Source-84805867.html>
 by using the webcam installed on school-issued laptops.

The School District Board approved a $610,000 settlement Monday night.

Board President David Ebby explained on the district 
website<http://www.lmsd.org/sections/news/default.php?m=0&t=today&p=lmsd_anno&id=1456>
 why they settled:
We believe this settlement enables us to move forward in a way that is most 
sensitive to our students, taxpayers and the entire school district community. 
The agreement is comprehensive, and effectively resolves all components of the 
laptop litigation, including the Robbins and Hasan cases and the Graphic Arts 
insurance case. It is the product of a lengthy, court-ordered mediation 
involving the active participation of Judge DuBois and Chief Magistrate Judge 
Reuter. The terms of the agreement have been thoroughly reviewed in a number of 
executive sessions over the past few weeks. Throughout the entire process, the 
Board has aggressively sought to protect the interests of our taxpayers.
Earlier this summer, the U.S. Attorney's Office, the FBI and the Montgomery 
County District Attorney cleared the District, and its employees - current and 
former -- of any criminal wrongdoing. That was an important moment for us -- it 
confirmed the results of an independent investigation and the District's own 
initial findings. The District acknowledged and apologized for any mistakes and 
addressed them immediately. We revised our policies and procedures, reaffirmed 
our commitment to technology and put safeguards into place to ensure the 
privacy of our students, staff and school families.

Ebby claimed that a recent insurance agreement played a large part in the 
timing of the settlement:
A major impetus behind settling this matter now is the recent agreement by our 
insurance carrier, Graphic Arts, to cover more than $1.2M of the fees and costs 
associated with this litigation to date. The proposed settlement costs include 
$175,000 to be placed in a trust for Blake Robbins, $10,000 for Jalil Hassan 
and $425,000 for plaintiff's counsel. This settlement is not under seal because 
as a public entity, we have a responsibility to report all terms of the 
agreement.

Back in February investigators began to look into WebcamGate after Harriton 
High School student Blake Robbins and his parents filed a 
lawsuit<http://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/documents/laptop_civil_action.pdf> 
accusing officials of remotely taking video and photos through Robbins' 
school-issued MacBook.

As many as 1,800 Lower Merion School District students from Lower Merion and 
Harriton High Schools were given the MacBook notebooks as part of a school 
program.

The case gained national attention and put into question Harriton's and Lower 
Merion's laptop program.




______________
Sincerely,

Ron Egolf, MCSE
Network Analyst, Area IV LTC
217-893-1431 (O)
217-841-4311 (C)
reg...@area4.k12.il.us

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