Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Is it alright to walk around naked?

Why yes it is if you are home alone, even then kinda scary but it is the best place to do it. Is it alright in an office building? NO! Have you ever thought to yourself that it would be nice to walk around your office naked? I hope not, if you have and I know who you are I would rather not have you tell me. The picture in my head would be cruel and very unusual punishment.
Well a fella thought about it and then actually took himself up on those thoughts. Scary thinking especially when you think that the job he held he should know better. The story is below.
Prosecutor naked at work
Security cameras see plenty of Hamilton official
BY JANICE MORSE ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER
HAMILTON - A top law-enforcement official in Hamilton, City Prosecutor Scott Blauvelt, is accused of "walking around the Government Services Center after business hours without clothing," the Butler County Sheriff's Office says.

Blauvelt, 35, who was charged with two counts of public indecency, was booked into the county jail and then released. He awaits a hearing in Hamilton Municipal Court, where Blauvelt usually works, said Sheriff's Maj. Anthony Dwyer.

Calling the situation "an odd occurrence," Dwyer said investigators don't know what motivated him.

Mayor Don Ryan said he couldn't comment Monday, but he plans to discuss Blauvelt's employment status with Law Director Hillary Stevenson today.

Thursday night, a guard monitoring a security camera spotted a person going into an area outside the camera's range, in a tower that houses county offices, Dwyer said. "Then (the guard) sees him come back naked. ... That started the investigation."

Investigators identified the nude man as Blauvelt, Dwyer said. Blauvelt also appears naked on security-camera footage from the previous night, but in the building's other tower. That tower houses city offices, Dwyer said, including the court where Blauvelt prosecutes cases.

The charge is a fourth-degree misdemeanor, which carries a jail term of up to one month and a maximum fine of $250.

Blauvelt's lawyer, Michael Gmoser, did not return a reporter's phone call.
Blauvelt has been a city prosecutor, defense attorney and formerly was a Butler County assistant prosecutor.

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