Internet Culture

Decorated former police captain coerced minors into webcam sex shows

An expert on computer forensics got caught producing child pornography.

Photo of Miles Klee

Miles Klee

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Michael Grennier, a retired police officer of South Plainfield, New Jersey, helped bring down a global hacker collective in the 1980s and is widely credited with ushering his colleagues into the Internet era. However, his talent for technology proved to be his undoing: yesterday, he admitted to authorities that he had enticed underage girls to perform explicit acts in return for clothes and money, watching and directing the action remotely by webcam.

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Appearing in Trenton federal court, Grennier pleaded guilty to “production of child pornography,” a charge that has applied to other cases of webcam sexual abuse of late. Though the U.S. law invoked defines the crime as staging a minor in explicit ways with the intent to create “visual depictions of that conduct,” it’s unclear how someone simply live-streaming those images might be prosecuted. Grennier, however, amassed a collection of photographs and videos, and investigators discovered a trail of lewd chat and text messages.

The two-time “Officer of the Year” and former police captain, who eventually became a computer forensic specialist for his department, was working in a similar capacity for a private firm when arrested in February. According to an F.B.I. complaint filed at the time, he “paid a minor girl for years to engage in the sexual acts on the Internet” and “paid for pictures of the girl naked, and on one occasion gave her and a second victim $500 to engage in sex acts in a hotel room.” It also contends that Grennier himself had sex with his victims, though this does not appear to be part of his guilty plea. Regardless, he faces a maximum prison sentence of 30 years, and a minimum of 15.

For someone supposedly attuned to the finer details of cybercrime, Grennier left a stunning plethora of digital evidence in his wake. Between his skills and sterling reputation—he was even head of the local D.A.R.E. anti-drug program—did he feel confidently above suspicion? Could he have been so tech-savvy that it took decades for law enforcement to notice his predatory pattern? At least one NJ.com commenter doubted it, remarking that his career-making hacker case “sounds impressive until you find out that it was a couple of 15 and 16 year olds seeing what they could get away with, in the eighties, when the internet was new to most people.”

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At the very least, it sounds like Grennier had a similar curiosity about him.

H/T The Star-Ledger | Photo by Greg Harrison/Flickr  

 
The Daily Dot