Defendant allegedly surreptitiously recorded high school
students while they used urinals and bathroom stalls
BOSTON – A Boston man was indicted today by a federal grand
jury in Boston for surreptitiously filming boys in the restrooms at Boston
Latin School (BLS).
Eric Tran Thai, 36, was indicted on four counts of sexual
exploitation of children. His arraignment date will be scheduled by the Court.
Thai was arrested on March 11 and charged by complaint. He was ordered detained
by the Court on March 19 and has been in custody since.
According to court documents, on Feb. 6 and Feb. 27, 2018,
two separate Boston College students reported to the police that they had been
videotaped without their knowledge or consent while they were using the men’s
restrooms on the Boston College campus. Following the Feb. 27, 2018, report,
police located and spoke with Thai, who was then arrested on state charges in
Middlesex County Superior Court.
It is alleged that while speaking with police, Thai admitted
to “taking some pictures” of a man in the stall next to him without the man’s
consent. He further admitted to engaging in such activity for about a year.
Thai was placed under arrest on state charges and his bag was subsequently
searched; in it, police found several covert camera devices, including faux
smoke detectors, a water bottle containing a small cube recording device, and a
pair of sunglasses outfitted with a built-in camera.
During a search of Thai’s home on March 1, 2018, law
enforcement seized approximately 26 computer hard drives, 20 thumb drives, 27
covert and regular cameras, 14 computers, iPads, and cell phones, and multiple
SD and Sim cards. During forensic analysis of the recovered items,
investigators found several folders labeled: BU, MIT, Harvard, Northeastern,
Bunker Hill, Boston Latin High School, and several different malls, airports,
and foreign country locations. Given the amount of data seized by investigators,
forensic analysis is ongoing.
It is alleged that the videos contained in folders labeled
“Boston Latin High School” contained approximately 45 surreptitiously-recorded
videos of male students in various states of dress using the urinals and stalls
in a Boston Latin High School boys’ bathroom. The videos appear to have been
created on approximately 10 separate dates between February and December 2017.
In general, the videos show Thai sitting in a bathroom stall
at Boston Latin High School recording individuals in adjacent stalls or at the
urinals through various secret recording methods. In some videos, Thai appears
to hold a camera over the top of the partition between the bathroom stalls and
videotaping from overhead. In other instances, he appears to hide a small
camera inside of his backpack, place the backpack on the bathroom floor and
videotape individuals in the adjacent bathroom stall from under the stall’s
partition. While recording, it appears that Thai would simultaneously view what
the camera was recording on a cellphone or a tablet device in his possession.
Based on this evidence, Thai was charged with sexual exploitation of children
in violation of federal law.
Members of the public who have questions, concerns, or
information about this case should contact the U.S. Attorney’s Office at
617-748-3274.
Each charge of sexual exploitation of children provides for
a mandatory minimum 15 years and up to 30 years in prison, a minimum of five
years and up to a lifetime of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000.
Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S.
Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.
United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling; Joseph R.
Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Boston Field Division; Middlesex District Attorney Marian T. Ryan; Boston
Police Commissioner William G. Gross; and Boston College Police Chief William
B. Evans made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne Paruti, Lelling’s
Project Safe Childhood Coordinator and a member of his Major Crimes Unit, is
prosecuting the case.
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