BATHROOM SCANDAL: REPORTERS GO UNDERCOVER AS SEXUAL PREDATORS
School official: 'Don't tell me anything ... don't say anything'
image: http://www.wnd.com/files/2014/05/toilet-paper-lavatory-600.jpg
Two reporters from James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas, known for its undercover video investigations of issues such as Common Core and election fraud, have taken their work to a school in North Carolina, which recently adopted a state law requiring men to use restrooms for men and women to use women’s rooms.
The investigation captured on video a school diversity official declaring she didn’t think it was wrong for a woman to use a men’s room because it was a “turn-on.”
Another school official, Jill Moffitt, the associate vice chancellor for student affairs who administers Title IX at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, was told by a male undercover journalist that he enjoys taking snapchats of females in the women’s bathroom. She told him to stop talking so she wouldn’t have to report him:
Male journalist: “There has been some snapchats but they self-destruct.”
UNC administrator: “Well they don’t really self-destruct.”
Male journalist: “I hope they self-destruct.”
Administrators: “You’re taking snapchats of women? You’re alerting me to what we call ‘sexual exploitation.’ Don’t tell me anything more… Don’t tell me anything more… When people take…don’t say anything just listen.”
Project Veritas suggested the officials were enabling the male reporter “posing as a sexual predator to use female bathrooms for deviant purposes.”
Title IX, however, requires officials to report and restrict such activities.
“Could gender neutral bathrooms be used to provide the ultimate cover for sexual exploitation? Going straight to the heart of the current bathroom controversy, Project Veritas went undercover in North Carolina to find out and is releasing their findings,” the group said.
Project Veritas noted U.S. Title IX provides that no “person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”
Project Veritas also pointed out that under North Carolina state law, it is illegal pursuant to NC Gen. Stat. § 14-202 to “secretly peep into [ ] room occupied by another.” This includes using any “device to create a photographic image of another person in that room for the purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of any person shall be guilty of a Class I felony.”
The organization added in a postscript that its undercover reporters didn’t actually do anything illegal; their ideas were confined to their conversations.
It was Deborah Miles, Asheville’s director of the center for diversity education, who had the conversation with the female undercover reporter:
Female journalist: “I mean, I think it’s … in this sick way, kind of … exciting.”
Diversity director: [laughs] “Yeah, because you’re not ‘supposed to do it.'”
Journalist: “You’re not supposed to do it, and, I mean, there’s guys in there! I like guys!”
Director: “Yeah, it’s a turn-on.”
Journalist: “I mean, is that wrong to say?”
Director: “No, it’s not wrong to say.”
“That university officials seem to turn a blind eye to the law is bad enough, but when they endanger the safety of our children by unnecessarily exposing them to sexual deviants in a bathroom environment they should face public exposure through the media,” said Project Veritas President James O’Keefe.
WND’s request to North Carolina-Asheville for comment did not generate a response.
Copyright 2016 WND
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2016/04/reporters-go-into-bathrooms-undercover-as-sexual-predators/#qtB0jD5mfzQWyIlo.99
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