Makem to face no charges on child porn images
Harrison Thorp
ROCHESTER – Finally some good news for Conor Makem, the former Rochester Times and Foster’s Daily Democrat reporter who was indicted on charges of felony falsifying of physical evidence and 19 misdemeanors of invasion of privacy in a bathroom camera scandal that came to light last fall. Rochester Police said today they will not be pursuing any child porn charges against him, although they confirmed that such images were found on one computer he used. “Although there were child porn images on the computer, it wasn’t only his computer,” Rochester Police Capt. Paul Toussaint said today.
Toussaint added that the computer was owned by the Rochester Times, was several years old and had been used by several different people. “It was not a computer he had exclusive access to,” noted Toussaint, who added that none of the children whose images were on the iMac computer are thought to be from the local area. Police and forensic detectives had painstakingly scoured the computer since it was seized last fall after several dozen images of child porn were initially identified. Meanwhile, Makem, 45, still faces a jury trial on the other charges, which allege he placed a camera in a second-floor women’s bathroom a few yards away from the former offices of Foster’s Rochester bureau in the Merchant’s Plaza in Rochester. The falsifying of evidence charge stems from his alleged tampering and dumping of the camera. The female victims listed in police affidavits were unknowingly videotaped “in various stages of undress” inside the bathroom. Makem had resided in Dover, N.H., but moved to Amesbury, Mass., soon after the initial charges were made. He has hired Att. Timothy Harrington of high-powered law firm Shaheen & Gordon of Dover as his defense counsel. The indictment handed down by a Strafford County grand jury in January still listed Makem’s old address as 5 West Concord St., Dover. The initial police investigation began on Oct. 7 when the woman who first discovered the suspected camera wondered what a blinking red light was doing in the upstairs Merchants Plaza bathroom and asked Makem to take a look. She said they agreed it should be turned over to police and he said he'd take care of it. Later in the day, according to the affidavit, the woman said she got a phone message from Makem saying he had given it to police and they had said they would be in touch with them if they needed anything. A few hours later she called police only to find out they had never been contacted by Makem, nor had the camera been turned in.
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