PA Teens Sentenced to Probation for AI-Generated Fake Images of Female Students

Wednesday, March 25, 2026 at 3:06 PM

Two 14-year-old boys from Lancaster, Pennsylvania received probation after admitting to creating 59 fake nude images of female classmates using artificial intelligence technology. The case has sparked broader concerns about AI misuse and led to civil lawsuits against the school.

LANCASTER, Pa. — A Pennsylvania judge sentenced two teenage boys to probation Wednesday after they confessed to generating artificial nude images of female students at their school using AI technology.

The defendants, both 14 years old when the incidents occurred, acknowledged creating 59 explicit images by digitally manipulating photographs of girls, primarily sourced from Instagram, and combining them with computer-generated adult content showing nudity and sexual acts.

Many of their targets attended Lancaster Country Day School alongside them, located west of Philadelphia. Court records indicate the investigation began when a parent contacted authorities after her daughter reported that a classmate was “taking photographs of students and using Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology to portray the female juvenile students as being nude.”

Lancaster County Common Pleas Court Judge Leonard Brown III conducted Wednesday’s juvenile disposition hearing, equivalent to adult sentencing proceedings. Beyond probation, each defendant must complete 60 hours of community service and avoid contact with their victims while paying undetermined restitution amounts.

Brown indicated the charges could be removed from their records after two years if they avoid further legal troubles. However, the judge noted neither teenager had expressed remorse or accepted accountability for their actions, stating that adult defendants would likely face state imprisonment for similar offenses.

Both boys remained silent when offered chances to address the court and declined media interviews afterward.

“This has been a regrettable, long torturous process for everyone involved,” said Heidi Freese, representing one defendant. “There were very interesting, underlying legal issues surrounding the charges in this case and those will be decided on a different day in a different case.”

Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday previously characterized the case as demonstrating “the dark side of modern technology and social media.”

“The conduct involved a weaponization of technology to victimize unsuspecting children who had photos online. It goes without saying that the impact on the victims is nothing short of devastation,” Sunday stated in an earlier announcement.

This resolution follows recent developments in Tennessee, where three teenagers filed suit against Elon Musk’s xAI company, alleging its Grok platform transformed their authentic photographs into sexually explicit imagery. The high school plaintiffs seek class-action representation for potentially thousands of similarly affected minors.

The 2024 Pennsylvania incident triggered student demonstrations, administrative departures, and the criminal prosecution of both teenagers.

Philadelphia attorney Nadeem Bezar, representing at least 10 victims, announced Tuesday his intention to pursue legal action “against the school and anybody else we think has culpability in these deepfakes being created and disseminated.”

Though he has not examined the images, Bezar expects legal proceedings to reveal “exactly when and where and how the school knew, how the boys created these images, what platforms they used to create these images and how they were disseminated.”

The impact on female victims has varied significantly, with some experiencing severe trauma, according to Bezar.

“You’re talking about teenage young women who are goal-driven, doing well in school, trying to do everything they can to just sort of fit in and find their way through life at that young age, where everything matters,” Bezar explained.

As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly accessible, legislators nationwide have enacted anti-deepfake measures. President Donald Trump signed the Take it Down Act last year, criminalizing non-consensual publication of intimate imagery including deepfakes while mandating website removal within 48 hours of victim notification.

According to consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen, 46 states have implemented deepfake legislation, with bills pending in Alaska, Missouri, New Mexico and Ohio.

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