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1 Read / Add Comments UPDATE: A Bergen County-based insurance underwriter for entertainers, athletes and corporate executives was released pending court action on child porn charges, authorities said. Matthew Heitman, 33, was arrested Thursday during a raid of his Hackensack home, Prosecutor Mark Musella said. The former Upper Saddle River resident used the Internet to view, download, and possess more than 1,000 digital files and distributed multiple digital files depicting nude and/or sexually explicit prepubescent and pubescent children, the prosecutor said. Heitman was discovered during a months-long Internet child pornography investigation by detectives from his office and local police, Musella said. They sent him to the Passaic County Jail on possession of child porn and endangerment counts, after which a judge released Heitman on Friday, with conditions, pending further court action. ....
Photo: Kenneth Worthy A Howell County man, 45-year-old Kenneth Worthy of West Plains, has been arrested and charged with statutory sodomy, first-degree child molestation, first-degree endangering the welfare of a child and incest. The West Plains Police Department says in a press release the arrest follows the Southwest Cyber Crime Task Force conducting a suspect interview in Wright County March 3 during a child exploitation investigation. During the suspect interview, a West Plains man, later identified as Worthy, was implicated in the commission of crimes involving a minor child and child pornography. Task Force investigators made contact with Worthy the following day. ....
Decades after The Terminator, it’s more believable than ever that tech companies will someday send us hurtling toward the apocalypse. In real life, that’s happening because they let elections get stolen, but Fox’s Next the latest in a long line of fiction about how cell phones are actually scary suggests that it’s not the skull-stomping Terminators we need to be afraid of, but SkyNet itself. Or, as it’s called here, “neXt.” John Slattery stars as the head of a big tech company who has lost faith (so to speak) in technology, making him the perfect person to assist the FBI’s Cyber Crime Task Force. After all, if anyone knows tech and the evil it’s capable of, it’s a guy who helped program it to do those evils. That’s all pretty straightforward TV procedural fare, but there is a bonus hook here: Slattery’s character sees stuff that isn’t there and has a tendency to smash computers with a hammer because he’s so afraid of them. So maybe he’s not ....