Students at a Colorado high school exchanged hundreds of naked photos of themselves, prompting a felony investigation by police and the forfeiture of a football game because many players have been implicated in the sexting scandal, officials said.
The controversy has roiled the Cañon City High School, about 115 miles south of Denver, and police are also investigating if any underage students were coerced into the lewd photography and whether any adults were involved, the school said in a statement.
“It has come to the attention of the Cañon City School District 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,” school officials said in a statement on Facebook.
Charges could amount to a Class 3 felony if students took “a picture of themselves showing a naked private body part and sent it to another person, … received such a picture and forwarded it to another person, or … received such a picture and retained possession of it over time,” the Cañon City School District said.
Investigators have at least three phones, including one with several hundred images on it, Cañon City Police Chief Paul D. Schultz said.
“We will be identifying people in the images,” he added. “We’re haven’t interviewed anybody yet. We’re in the process of obtaining search warrants. We’re in the process of coordinating forensic investigations of cell phones.”
Nude photos taken on campus
Some of the nude photos are believed to have been taken on campus, said Schools Superintendent George Welsh.
Students have been suspended, but the number wasn’t disclosed, according to the schools chief.
“There isn’t a school in the United States probably at this point that hasn’t at some point dealt with the issue of sexting,” Welsh said.
Students used a photo vault app that hides the nude photos by appearing to be a calculator or media player, Welsh said.
“When you go into it and you … hold a certain button long enough, a prompt for password comes up. Once you enter that password, then any messages that have been sent from photo vault to photo vault start coming up,” Welsh said.
The app is “a little bit like Snapchat,” he added. “You can choose for the photo not to be able to remain on the device.”
Questions about sex offender registration
Fremont County District Attorney Thom LeDoux encouraged students to surrender phones and digital devices with the nude photos.
“For parents that may be having conversations with their children or reviewing cell phones as the superintendent recommended, they need to understand that continuing or ongoing possession of these materials does constitute a very serious crime for the adults and for the children,” the prosecutor said.
Any convictions could involve registration as a sex offender, the prosecutor said.