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AOL Monitor Accused of Luring 15-Year-Old for Sex

Amy's Robot writes "According to the AP, an Internet chat room monitor hired by AOL to keep children safe from sexual predators seduced a California girl online and was about to meet her for sex when he was found out by a co-worker, a lawsuit charges. The incident happened 2 years ago, but has become public this week because the lawsuit was just filed by the girl, now 19. She accuses AOL of failing to supervise the employee and of falsely advertising that its online service was safe for children. Who's watching the watchers?"

39 of 851 comments (clear)

  1. Can of worms? by fembots · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This might not be the only case, we might see a lot of me-toos lawsuits soon.

    And to watch the watchers, the outcome may have already suggested a solution - some sort of peer reviews, his co-worker did find out his activity right?

    1. Re:Can of worms? by mboverload · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you are 15 and stupid enough to meet someone from the net to have sex...you're an idiot. She has no right to file this lawsuit. When will people be responsible and stop trying to freeload?

    2. Re:Can of worms? by CodeBuster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The law does not recognize someone as a legally responsible adult until the age of 18. Who among us did NOT do some fairly stupid things when we were teenagers?

    3. Re:Can of worms? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Shit, I don't know about you, but the dumb stuff I did as a teenager pales in comparison to the shockingly, dangerously, freakishly stupid things I did after I went off to college.

      The same goes for most of my friends:

      Teenage years: petty crime, drinking, and a little driving recklessly.

      College years: alcohol poisoning, joining cults, getting stoned, stealing radar detectors from cars, exploring "alternative" sexual behavior, losing thousands of dollars playing blackjack, acquiring psycho-stalker ex-girlfriends, getting pregnant, getting arrested for providing beer to minors, starting fires... and the list goes on.

      Maybe it really shouldn't be legal to do much of anything until you're 29 or so.

      And don't give me that "old enough to fight for your country is old enough to drink or vote" bullshit. 18-year olds can be very good at killing people, but that doesn't mean they can hold their liquor or stay awake through a whole episode of "Frontline."

    4. Re:Can of worms? by lachlan76 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      18-year olds can be very good at killing people, but that doesn't mean they can hold their liquor or stay awake through a whole episode of "Frontline.

      The idea is that if they're old enough to make a choice that can result in getting killed for their country that they should be able to make choices regarding their own bodies.

    5. Re:Can of worms? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's funny. My wife married me when she was 19. I was 21. We have steady, well paid jobs, we're paying a mortgage and have been married for over three years now.

      So you're saying because you have no self control and act like a four year old, no one is capable of being an adult until they're "29 or so"? Don't tar me with the same brush as you and your college buddies thanks. Some of us have brains.

    6. Re:Can of worms? by TheoGB · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Where did all the irony go? Perhaps people need to re-read what was posted and realise the '29 or so' thing was obviously a joke. "Hello? McFly?"

      The point that was so eloquently made was that 15 is an age where you can be as adult or as stupid as when you're 25. Yes, there are somethings you don't have experience of but fundamentally you can't just sit there letting the state and others pay for someone else's stupidity until an arbitrary cut-off where you say "Well we've taught you all we can. Any gross stupidity from now on is your own look out."

  2. Clarifying the numbers by serutan · · Score: 5, Informative

    It started when she was 15, they were going to meet when she turned 17, that was 2 years ago, now she's 19. So that clears that up.

    1. Re:Clarifying the numbers by jerw134 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thank you for clarifying those numbers. I was about to start complaining, since I haven't RTFA yet.

    2. Re:Clarifying the numbers by Monkelectric · · Score: 5, Funny
      Posting anonymous for obvious reasons.

      I think at some point in this country we are going to have an honest debate about age of consent. In most european countries it varies from 14-17.

      We like to maintain this fantasy that our kids are NOT having sex -- but, Ive been in the back rooms, and the level of detachment young people have from sex took me until my late 20's to develop.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    3. Re:Clarifying the numbers by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Funny
      Posting anonymous for obvious reasons.

      Whoops. Whatever your reasons were, they're irrelevant now.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    4. Re:Clarifying the numbers by Kaz+Kylheku · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The way I see it: the girl strings along the guy for two years, promises to meet, changes her mind and two years later slaps the guy with this!

      Could someone clarify who the aggressor is again?

      Was this girl chained to the computer and forced to make herself available for chat and respond?

    5. Re:Clarifying the numbers by notthe9 · · Score: 5, Funny

      at least I can admit to my kiddie porn addiction anonymously!

    6. Re:Clarifying the numbers by tgibbs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Regardless of your obscure views of paedophiles this guy was employed to protect her from people like himself.

      It seems to me that the guy's behavior was improper, given that he had a professional relationship with the young woman. On the other hand, I think the term "paedophile" should be reserved for those who are sexually attracted to people who are below the age of sexual maturity, not merely below the age of consent in a particular locale.

    7. Re:Clarifying the numbers by aussie_a · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's 14 here in B.C.

      Yeah, but times have moved forward a couple of thousand years since B.C. Who cares what the age of consent was back then? I want to know what it is now.

    8. Re:Clarifying the numbers by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Funny

      "at least I can admit to my kiddie porn addiction anonymously!"

      I hate to break it to you, but those Japanese schoolgirls aren't kiddies.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    9. Re:Clarifying the numbers by Marr · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So it's not a subdivision of pedophilia then, is it? It's a paraphilia.

      Also, this term refers only to those exclusively attracted to adolescents. The way you state it would classify pretty much the entire adult population of Earth as mentally ill, which is (While I personally am prepared to accept it) pretty much a contradiction in terms.

  3. Hmm... by pwnage · · Score: 5, Funny

    Original poster: A/S/L?

    --
    Reminder: Apple owns 1/255th of the internet.
  4. She's suing whom? by Dachannien · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In other news, people who arrive at the stark realization that they're going to be losers on welfare and in debt for the rest of their lives are suing corporations with deep pockets instead of getting real jobs.

  5. Only Human? by tesseract5d · · Score: 5, Funny

    I guess that means they need to move to AI bot monitors instead of those silly humans? I mean, if they can make bots in UT2004 that are that good....

  6. perfect job for pedofiles by sfcat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    AOL monitor. Seriously, don't they do background checks for this type of job. I understand not doing them for most jobs, but this type of job, you would think it would be par for the course. But I guess if he doesn't have a record and she was only 17 at the time and if he was like 21-24 its not that bad (illegal, but not like he was 45). But what is really sad is that she is the one sueing. She made the decision to meet someone from a chat room and now is sueing because she was allowed to meet the guy. Sounds like sueing for dollars more than anything. Isn't America great...

    --
    "Those that start by burning books, will end by burning men."
    1. Re:perfect job for pedofiles by Frogbert · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First of all she was 17, in many, many, countries this is exceeding the age of consent so its either saying that american girls are typically more innocent then the rest of the world, or the people running the show in your country are a bunch of prudes.

      Secondly the guy isn't a pedophile because she isn't exactly prepubescent. There is nothing wrong with being attracted to girls who have gone through puberty no matter what their age, its a biological thing.

      Regardless the best job for a pedophile would be in the clergy or as a scout master or something, many more people are wary to meet someone off the internet these days, and besides why put in all the effort when you could just have the parents bring their kids to you.

  7. I doubt she was 'seduced'... by Ninwa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She was fifteen, she'd had the talk about the birds and the bees. I find it hard to believe that people are seduced into sex, and this was only considered seducing after he had been talking to her for two years. Most teenagers don't know eachother for two days and they get it on like jack rabbits. If anything I applaud his patience.

    1. Re:I doubt she was 'seduced'... by krumms · · Score: 5, Funny

      wanted to have sex with herself

      mod me up if you too like out of context quotes!

  8. Who's watching the watchers? by venicebeach · · Score: 5, Funny


    Who's watching the watchers?

    Sounds like they are watching each other.

  9. What is the crime? by shamir_k · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the story, they met online when she was 15, and he was in his early 20s. Two years later, when she was 17, they arranged to meet for sex. As far as I know, the age of consent is 16, meaning that a 17 year old can legally agree to have sex with an older person. I don't see how the monitor committed a crime, unless he propositioned her before she turned 16, and that might be difficult to prove in court.
    As for AOL being liable, that's a stretch too. They probably disclaim all liability in their terms of use, and unless she can prove some fraud or negligence on the part of the employee, I don't see how they can be held liable.
    This whole story smacks of a frivolous lawsuit by somebody who just realised that she might be able to embarass a big company into settling rather than face publicity.

    1. Re:What is the crime? by fermion · · Score: 5, Interesting
      There is not crime. This is not a criminal trail. It is a lawsuit. And it is certainly not frivolous. AOL marketed thier service as superior to other services based on the fact that service was monitored. They claimed in advertising that the service was worth the extra money because of the added security. They fed off the paranoa of parents, who were the one likely paying for the service, by explicitely claiming added security. Security that was clearly not realized, at least in this particular case.

      The age of consent has nothing to do with it. The expectation based on AOL advertising was that minors would be protected from predators. The fact that a rape victim is 16 does not automatically mean that the victim in fact consented, or that a possible lapse in promised security did not in fact provide the means for the rape.

      And they absolutely can be liable. If a firm offers a service, they cannot then state the service does not in fact exist, or is of no value. That is bait and switch. I cannot, for instance, open a store, say that a product is available, and then not have the product available. Even the cheapest of stores guarantees product availability for at least on day. Under your logic, I can claim to provide DSL speed, but only offer analog telephone modem lines. All I have to do is send a note with the shipped package saying that all service is analog modem. The standards of product offers and prices have been set for quite a while. If a firm is going to offer something, they better provide it. Even an disclaimer is often not enough.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  10. Re:Parents by mindstrm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sure, parents should be responsible.

    But if AOL specifically went out of their way to make chat rooms that were SAFE for young children, by actively having people monitor them and keep them acceptable, tha'ts a selling feature to parents.

    It's like if you sent your kid to daycare, and he was mistrated.. would you say to that parent "You should have been there, how dare you trust your kid to some daycare?"

    At some point, AOL WAS responsible for this.

  11. Re:the Plato reference by nacturation · · Score: 5, Funny

    Qui Custodes Custodiat? is probably better translated as "who guards the guardians" than "who watches the watchers"?

    I was thinking more along the lines of "Who cleans the janitors?"

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  12. Re:I will tell you why by darkpixel2k · · Score: 5, Funny

    kids will stop having sex and stop getting pregnant if you make it illegal

    I didn't have sex until I was 18 because it was Illegal in my state...

    *sobs*
    Ok, OK! It's really because I was a loser in high school and couldn't get laid if my life depended on it...

    --
    There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
  13. Re:Pregnate 12 year olds? Nature is Telling Us... by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Of course it is, and the question becomes if evolution has made 12 yearolds[sic] sexual beings at the age of 12, why is the age of concent[sic] 18?"

    Let's look at why that argument makes no sense:

    If evolution has made humans capable of killing each other, why are there laws against killing?
    If evolution has made humans liars at any age, why are there laws against lying in some situations?


    I could go on. The point is this: human laws exist to curb human nature. I forget the philosopher who said it, but laws are only for criminals. If we could trust everyone to behave in mutually altruistic was (assuming somehow that everyone agreed on what that meant), we wouldn't need laws. Laws exist to exert normative force on those who would otherwise transgress.

    What this comes down to is that we have laws restricting the age of consent so as to prevent the abuse of children by adults. The state has a valid interest in preventing emotionally immature children from being taken-advantage-of by malicious adults.

    --
    "Stumble before you crawl"
  14. Can of worms? No, more like a can of bullshit... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, but it's such bullshit. If a 17 year-old girl consents to having sex after having known someone since she was 15 then that's her own decision and can't in all honesty be considered illegal (assuming, of course, that the age of consent has now been passed).

    If it is, then where do you want to draw the line? If a guy first has contact with a girl when she's 15 then she consents to having sex with him when she's 19 does that then still count as wrong? How about if she consents to having sex when she's 21? 30? 40? Are you just going to pick an arbitrary number?

    The girl was below the age of consent at 15. If the guy had asked her to have sex with him then then that would have been wrong. But for a 17 year-old to agree to do something of her own free will - when the law recognises that she's free to do it - and then raise a hue and cry about it is plainly ridiculous.

    If I were a judge and this came to my court I'd ask the girl one simple question: "when he first asked you to have sex with him or made any sexual overtures towards you, how old were you and did he know your true age at that time?". If the girl said she was past the age of consent (especially if she was a year or more past it) then I'd throw her case out in a heartbeat.

    Girls meet older guys all the time. When they first meet is irrelevant. It's when they get down to business that matters. And, in this case, that didn't even happen, did it?

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  15. Re:Can of worms? No, more like a can of bullshit.. by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The difference here is it's not 'just some older guy'. It is an AOL employee specifically hired to prevent exactly what went on. To prevent adults from coming on to kids in a kid only chat room. Whether they had sex or not is irrelevant.

    This is a case of AOL failing to provide an advertised service.

  16. Re:Watching the watchers? by necrofluxneo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Parents are probably a factor, if not the cause in this case as you claim. But AOL should have at least one employee for every online customer to read their conversations in case something like this comes up. They would then need a second teir of employees set up to watch those employees so that cases such as this are shut down before trouble ensues. I would further suggest 5 additional tiers of protection, a sort of check and balance system against untoward acts. To cap it all off there must be a final line of defense - a "high council" if you will - of people who have proven to be impecably moral, perhaps some of the Catholic Church's best, to oversee the entire operation. Surely then AOL's customer's parents can be confident their children are safeguarded against having to make any decisions for their own well being or god forbid have to take any responsibility for anything that happens in their lives. In this case I hope the parents make out with billions! That'd show 'em!

  17. Let me be the first to say... by SonicSpike · · Score: 5, Funny

    "You've Got Jail!"

    sorry yall... I couldn't resist ;-)

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  18. Re:Watching the watchers? by Armchair+Dissident · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Normally I would completely agree with you, however in this instance, AOL were advertising the service as being safe for kids. Much like a day-care centre where you drop your kids off with adults you believe are there to ensure your children won't come to any harm; AOL advertised this service as being a place where your kids could safely chat on the internet.

    If a day care centre did not perform adequate checks on their employees, and then employed a known pedophile who then attempted to molest children at the centre, the centre would rightly be sued for negligence - precisely because they've advertised the service as safe for children. AOL's case is no different; they've advertised the service as safe for kids.

    Of course, whether AOL have or have not failed in this duty is for the courts to decide.

    --

    The ways of gods are mysteriously indistinguishable from chance.
  19. Re:The parent's can't do everything. by ergo98 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems the Slashdot crowd is very fast on judging parents

    I think it's pretty much to be expected given that the vast, vast, vast majority of Slashdotters are either under-age (and thus jumping at an opportunity to subtly pass judgement on their own parents), or single. The "where's the parents???" line has reappeared in hundreds of threads on Slashdot, and every time it gets moderated up as insightful.

    It isn't insightful - it's tired, repetitive, idealistic bullshit, often in direct logical opposition to the story that they're bitching about. A parents group spending their time and effort to try to have age-limits applied on video games? WHERE'S THE PARENTS! Television censored after massive complaints about inappropriate content? WHERE'S THE PARENTS! It's so illogical it really defies comment, but every time these moronic comments get modded Score 5: Insightful (but dumb).

    Parents can't watch their children 24/7 and create healthy children, especially in the mid teens, and there has to be some reliance upon the behaviour of others in this giant village that we all live in - It DOES take a village to raise a child, unless you're raising a bush-person.

  20. It's NOT about "good enough at killing" by Moraelin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    See, aiming a gun that-a-way and shooting is the easy part. Technically you could even get a monkey to kill people, or just release a bunch of rabid pitbulls and hope they gore someone.

    The thing, however, is about responsibility and making the right judgment call.

    E.g., when you stand guard for _hours_ with an assault rifle and live ammo, you're trusted to be responsible enough to _not_ start shooting at cars on the nearby highway because you're bored. E.g., when you're taught how to lob a grenade, and yes at some point you'll get to use live ones, you're trusted to be responsible enough to not lob it at your platoon mates or shove it down your own pants. Etc.

    But you know why that works, while college is an exercise in proving you're more stupid than the others? Consequences.

    Sorry, 18-19 year olds are _not_ brain-dead. They _are_ perfectly capable of cause-effect judgment.

    However, like all humans at all ages, they choose the course of action that offers the best (short time) effect.

    In the army you _know_ that you'll be up shit creek without a paddle if you do something stupid.

    In college it's exactly the other way around: the way to gain prestige and peer recognition is to do all those sorts of stupid things. Think of it as the RL equivalent of karma whoring on /. You don't get to be fashionable and popular in college by being the guy/gal who actually learns stuff. You get to be fashionable and popular by fitting in with the rebel-without-a-clue gang. You get to be _really_ popular if you up the ante: whatever idiocy someone else did, by jove, show everyone that you can do it twice as idiotic.

    So it's not that you're more stupid at 19 than you are at 29. In both cases you just pick the course of action that promises the most rewards, and the least perceived short-term risks. It's just that at 19 and in college the whole rewards and negative consequences scale is turned on its head. So the perfectly logical course of action to take in that situation, seems bloody stupid when viewed from another context.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  21. Missing the bigger story here by untaken_name · · Score: 5, Funny

    AOL Monitor Accused of Luring 15-Year-Old for Sex

    The incident happened 2 years ago

    but has become public this week because the lawsuit was just filed by the girl, now 19

    It isn't the seduction, or that it was an AOL monitor that did it. Nope, the biggest story is how she could go from 15 years old to 19 years old in only two years.

    Spooky.

    Now I need to figure out what she's doing, and do the exact opposite.