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NJ woman awarded $10K in revenge-porn lawsuit against ex-math teacher who posted her nude selfies online

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A 29-year-old New Jersey woman has won a lawsuit against her former high school math teacher who posted her nude selfies on a revenge-porn website.

Kaitlyn Cannon, a graduate of Wall High School in Monmouth County’s Wall Township, was appalled to find the intimate snaps on a site called Anon-IB in 2018, two years after she sent them to her then-boyfriend when she attended Penn State, Insider reported.

Cannon has no idea how her former teacher, Christopher Doyle, obtained the images.

“I didn’t think there would be someone in my life who would do this kind of thing,” Cannon testified last week in Ocean County Superior Court, according to the outlet.

“He’s my former teacher. He’s not someone who’s supposed to see me that way,” added Cannon, who was awarded $10,000 in damages.

In March 2018, she received an alarming text from an old friend who informed her that the graphic images had been posted on the Dutch site, which peddles non-consensual porn.

Cannon’s ex-boyfriend, whom she dated for four years, later told her that he had lost the phone to which she sent the revealing selfies, according to the news outlet.

On Friday, an Ocean County jury found that the person responsible for sharing the 14 nude and semi-nude images was Doyle, Insider reported.

An investigation determined that the images were posted on Anon-IB from his home IP address — although it was unclear how he obtained them.

“I was shocked and confused, hoping it wasn’t real,” she testified last week.

Doyle has been ordered to pay Cannon $10,000 in damages after the jury decided that he violated New Jersey’s non-consensual porn statute and a law against publicly disclosing private information.

“I was shocked and confused, hoping it wasn’t real,” she testified last week.

“Unfortunately, despite this egregious finding, the jury awarded KC a mere $10,000 in damages,” the woman’s attorney, Cali Madia, told Insider.

“We’re obviously delighted that the jury saw through the defendant’s story, but also disappointed that the award doesn’t reflect the real harm the defendant caused,” Madia added.

All of the leaked images showed her first name, her last initial and her New Jersey hometown, while some also revealed her face, according to Insider.

Cannon testified that she had received creepy messages on Facebook from men across New Jersey — and that her parents and grandmother answered their phones to heavy breathing and lewd remarks.

She said she has suffered through five years of nightmares, panic attacks and hundreds of hours in therapy amid the ordeal.

Doyle had claimed he did not remember if he had posted the images — but Madia told Insider that the jury didn’t believe him.

Last week, Doyle’s attorney, James Uilano, declined to explain his client’s defense to Insider, which reported that his questioning of witnesses suggested he would argue his client was not the original or only person to post the selfies.

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