Man pleads guilty to posting 'revenge porn' - Action News
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PEI

Man pleads guilty to posting 'revenge porn'

Brian Robert MacAdam, 27, of Charlottetown posted a nude photo of an ex-girlfriend 'because he wanted to hurt her.' Police found pornographic images of several Island women on the website MacAdam used.

Traded photos with other men like a 'baseball card collection'

Brian Robert MacAdam, 27, pleaded guilty to posting an intimate image of an ex-girlfriend on a website where pornographic photos of women were traded. (CBC)

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  • On June 17, 2019, Christopher Robert Delong was found not guilty in P.E.I. Supreme Court.

A Charlottetown manhas pleaded guiltyto posting an intimate imageof anex-girlfriendon a website where pornographic photosofwomen were traded like a "baseball card collection."

Brian Robert MacAdam, 27, appeared in Charlottetown provincial court Friday.

"It's a case of revenge porn," Crown prosecutor Lisa Goulden said outside the court room."It's a kind of cyber-bullying."

According to an agreed statement of factsthat was read into the court record, one of MacAdam's former girlfriends contacted Charlottetown police earlier this year, after she discovered a nude photo of herself posted online.

It had been posted to awebsite that allows users to post pornographic materials anonymously.

I lock my doors at night, I'm afraid to go out of my home ... Iget messages from people I don't even know. Unidentified victim

When interviewed by police, MacAdamtold investigators he'd done it "for revenge because he wanted to hurt her."

Publication of an intimate image,without consent of the person in the photo, is a criminal offence.

During the investigation, police found MacAdamhad posted intimate images of a number of other womenfrom P.E.I. Police identified four femaleswho had not given consent. Some of them did not knowMacAdam and did not know how he obtainedtheir photos

MacAdamcompared it to "showing off a baseball card collection," according to the agreed facts presented in court. Analysis of his computer revealed he posted 69 images to the website, 41 of which were deemed "intimate"underthe criminal code.

This has devastated me and my family. I want my freedom back. Unidentified victim

Many of the images had the names of the womenas part of the file's name,according to the agreed facts.

MacAdamalso pleaded guilty to distributionof child pornography.Court heard he posted five photos of a female who was 16 and 17 years old when the photos were taken. They included images of the teen performing oral sex on MacAdam.

One of the women read a victim impact statement in court Friday, describing the effect MacAdam'sactionshave had on her.

"I lock my doors at night, I'm afraid to go out of my home ... Iget messages from people I don't even know," she told court. "This has devastated me and my family. I want my freedom back."

The identities of the victims are protected by a publication ban.

MacAdam also pleaded guilty to violating conditions of his releasefollowing his arrest.Court heard he attempted to contactsome of his victims by phone and social media.

Police contacted the operatorof website where MacAdamposted the photos. Thenon-consensual images have been removed. The website remains in operation.

Police have charged one other Island man as a result of the investigation. Christopher Robert Delong, 27, of New Dominion,has pleaded not guilty to distribution of an intimate image and obstruction of justice. Histrial is slated in P.E.I. Supreme Court in December.

MacAdamis being held in custody.The case is back in court Sept. 24 for a sentencing hearing. The mandatory minimum sentence for distribution of childpornography is one year in jail.

Sigrid Rolfe, coordinator, P.E.I. Rape and Sexual Assault Centre, says the damage from this type of crime is significant.

Sigrid Rolfe, the past executive director of the P.E.I. Rape and Sexual Assault Centre, says the addition of third party reporting is another viable option that other jurisdictions in Canada have put into practice. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

"It's a major breach of privacy butit's also a major betrayal. If you're in arelationship with someone that you trust and you share images with, and then to have that person humiliate you," she said.

"As well the long-term impacts for people can be, well the humiliation, the embarrassment, the shame and it's lifelong because those images are out there forever and there's nothing you can do."

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