City porn charges teacher quizzed over deleted files; Labour leader revealed police enquiry.A FORMER councillor accused of downloading indecent images of children deleted hundreds of files off his computer, the day after his party leader revealed he was under investigation.One-time Clubmoor councillor Benjamin Williams For the Vermont lieutenant governor, see . Benjamin Williams (1 January 1751 -- 20 July 1814) was the last Federalist governor of the U.S. state of North Carolina, from 1799 to 1802 and from 1807 to 1808. , 35, admitted he had removed 207 files from his computer''s memory the day after speaking to Liverpool Labour leader Cllr Joe Anderson
Joe Anderson (born c. 1981) is a British actor. He attented Richmond upon Thames College and later the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London. in December, 2007. He was arrested by police two days later on suspicion of downloading indecent images. But Williams, of Townsend Avenue, Norris Green History Norris Green is a large housing estate and council ward in Liverpool, England comprising some 1,500 dwellings, it is locally known as "Noggsy". It was built in the 1920s on land donated to the city by Lord Derby, who was at the time resident at nearby Knowsley , insisted he had simply removed the files to make his computer work quicker. History and politics teacher Williams had originally fallen under suspicion in October, 2006, after the IT manager at Southport''s King George King George has referred to many kings throughout history. When used, by Americans, without further reference it most often means George III of the United Kingdom, against whom the Whigs of the American Revolution rebelled. V (KGV KGV Kurs-Gewinn-Verhältnis KGV King George V (class of British battleship) kgV Kleinstes Gemeinsames Vielfaches (German: Least Common Multiple) KGV King George V School ) college discovered he had been inputting explicit terms such as "Lolita" and "child porn" into school computers. Williams left after a compromise agreement was reached, but insisted the searches were sparked by concern for his students. He was adamant he had never viewed any obscene images. During his second day of evidence yesterday, Williams confirmed Cllr Anderson had told him a Section 47 enquiry was under way on December 15, 2007. A section 47 inquiry is a joint social services and police investigation into child protection issues. But Williams insisted he did not realise the police would be involved.But prosecutor Peter Davies questioned Williams over why, the very next day, he deleted 207 files from his computer''s temporary internet cache. He said: "I never, ever thought it was a sinister activity. "I thought it was a way of making my computer work more effectively. I guess I would do it every week or two. "The reason was totally innocuous." He added that he regularly removed files from his computer when it was running slowly or freezing. Williams also admitted he had continued to enter explicit search terms into his home computer, but insisted it was to prove his innocence against KGV''s allegations. He said: "I was in a state of anguish. Every time there was a story in the papers, it would re-ignite my anguish about everything that was said in these false allegations. I simply could not believe a reputable search engine would churn out anything inappropriate." Williams denies 10 charges of downloading indecent images. The case continues. CAPTION(S): Joe Anderson Ben Williams |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion