$1 Million Lawsuit Says Target Employee Ruined Oregon Man's Life with False Child Pornography Accusations
$1 Million Lawsuit Says Target Employee Ruined Oregon Man's Life with False Child Pornography Accusations
A $1 million lawsuit against Target claims an Oregon employee made up a story about seeing pictures of naked, bound and tortured children on a man’s iPhone.According to The Oregonian, that employee filed a formal report with the Tigard Police Department, who then contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Both agencies spent months building a case against Jeffrey Buckmeyer, who had no idea he was being watched.Last summer, Tigard Police and the FBI conducted a joint raid on the 43-year old man’s apartment. Agents searched his apartment, seized his cell phone and confiscated his computers. Buckmeyer, all the while, was made to sit in the back seat of a police car. There, officers interrogated him while his neighbors looked on.The Oregonian notes that the accusations levied against Buckmeyer could’ve sent him to prison.But the case quickly went cold. After spending four months searching Buckmeyer’s electronics, the FBI came up to empty-handed. There was no evidence—not on his computer, not on his cell phone or in any documents or magazines—that Buckmeyer had ever looked at child pornography or personally abused children in any way.
A Target employee said Buckmeyer's phone was full of explicit child pornography images--but an intensive forensic search by the FBI turned up nothing. Image via Pixabay. CC0 Creative Commons.
Sources
Family files $1M lawsuit against Target, claims employee ruined man’s life with false accusations of child porn on iPhoneTarget employee tanked innocent man’s reputation with false story of seeing naked girls on his iPhone, $1M lawsuit says
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.