Crime & Safety

Bushkill Man Faces Wiretapping Charge

Thomas Drago was under investigation earlier this year for allegedly spying on his co-workers' computers.

A Bushkill Township man who was the Easton Area School District's former technology director is facing arrest on wiretapping charges, according to published reports.

Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli told The Morning Call Thursday that he signed an arrest warrant for Thomas Drago.

Drago, 54, faces one felony count of violating the state's wiretapping laws. The charge is "intercept communications," a level-three felony. The charge was filed Wednesday at the office of District Judge Jackie Taschner of Palmer Township.

The charge is connected to a police investigation into allegations that Drago accessed his colleagues' computers without their permission, copied documents that may have contained student information, made an unauthorized recording of a closed school board meeting, and may have taken photos of a female school employee's breast

The case began in October 2012, when Stephen Furst, the district's director of teaching and learning, was on his computer and noticed a binocular icon on the screen.

When he clicked on it, Drago's name appeared. Furst sent Drago a message, the warrant says.

“Tom, what are you doing?” Furst asked him. He got no response, but the binoculars disappeared.

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The warrant says Furst wrote to Superintendent Susan McGinley, concerned that Drago had remotely accessed his computer. The district had another employee examine Drago's computer. She discovered that he had accessed McGinley's laptops as well as those of seven other district employees.

When confronted, Drago first denied accessing anyone's computer, the warrant says. Then he said he made a mistake. Then he said he had permission. The district suspended him with pay. 

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The warrant says the district began to dig deeper, and hired Miles Technologies of Moorestown, N.J., to examine Drago's computer. 

The examiner, Mike Nelson, confirmed the district's earlier findings. Drago had accessed other employees' computers hundreds of times without permission and may have accessed and copied student files.

The examination also found 70 photos of nude women.

“It is not confirmed at this time if some of the nude images may potentially be of minors," the warrant says.

In addition to those pictures, there were two photos showing a woman's breast and cleavage, believed to be those of a school employee.

If Drago took the photo with a webcam without the woman's consent, it would constitute a violation of the state invasion of privacy law.

The warrant says the examination also found a recording of an April 2012 school board meeting that was not open to the public and had been made without the consent of the participants, who included board members, school employees and district offiicals.

According to the warrant, the examiner found that Drago had hidden the audio file of this recording and the pornographic images on his computer by running two operating systems at once. 

Drago came to work for the district in January 2002. Prior to that, he worked for 20 years for the Phillipsburg School District.

The school board voted to accept Drago's resignation last Dec. 10. According to the agenda from that meeting, his last day was Jan. 31, the same day police sought the search warrant.


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