


"He does not believe any of the girls were older than 18."
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"He (the youth) kept the photos in an app called Keepsake which is an app on his iPhone that is password protected," says the document.

The document says one of the boys visited Bridgewater police and gave a statement detailing how the group functioned, saying, "the girls sent the photos willingly but did not know they were being shared." The document says the teenaged girl "did not know her picture was taken." The document says the girl saw an image of herself on an iPad, and then adds, "it is a picture of (name removed) in the nude and was captured by (name removed) when (she) was changing." In another portion of the police information, Heather Foote, the vice-principal of Parkview Education Centre in Bridgewater, told police she had learned from a teenaged girl that a nude picture of her may have appeared with her face blotted out. The various statements and allegations in the document have yet to be proven in court. The document says school administrators learned the account had been created while the boys were at school "during a class," but no photos were shared while at school. The principal told police she'd learned that at that time the second Dropbox had another 10 to 15 photos in it. It defines nude images as those exposing private parts, while suggestive images may cover private parts but appear to be sexual in nature. "There were about 60 images in the first Dropbox that consisted of nude and suggestive photos," says the document. The school principal told police she learned from a student of the two Dropbox accounts and the number of images in them at that time. "Daphne Egilsson, principal at BHS, received a tip from a student who wished to remain anonymous, advising there were several students in the school in possession of nude photos of other female students within the school," says the document, adding that she and the vice principal started making inquiries. The record says the police inquiry began in May 2015 when Bridgewater police detectives received a complaint that students at Bridgewater Junior/Senior were in possession of the images. file-sharing service, and another 10 to 15 images sent to a second Dropbox account. The document says about 60 images of girls were sent to one password-protected account on Dropbox, a U.S. She plans to ask for further details to be released in arguments scheduled for Jan. The 36-page document was provided to media on Monday at Bridgewater provincial court after Nancy Rubin, a lawyer representing the CBC, made arguments for the release of partially redacted copies. Their identities are protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Two 18-year-olds and four 15-year-old boys are facing charges of distributing intimate images of at least 20 high school girls without consent, and possessing and distributing child pornography. The details were provided in statements collected by police for a June 1, 2015, application to obtain a search warrant in a case involving the alleged sharing of intimate images by teenaged boys at Bridgewater Junior/Senior High School. Police uncovered up to 75 intimate images of teenage girls in an investigation centring around a single Nova Scotia school, and heard at least one photo was snapped while a girl was changing without her knowledge, according to court documents.
