Crime & Safety
Voyeurism Charges Added Against Former Wethersfield Principal
He is accused of taking photographs of young girls with his cellphone inside a Hartford Wal-Mart store last fall.

WETHERSFIELD, CT — The former principal of a Wethersfield elementary school accused of taking photographs of young girls with his cellphone inside a Hartford Wal-Mart store in September is now also facing voyeurism and risk of injury charges.
John Bean, 46, who resigned as principal of Highcrest Elementary School in late November following his arrest on Sept. 24, 2016, turned himself in to state police in Hartford Monday morning. He was chargedwith four counts each of voyeurism and risk of injury to a minor.
Bond was set at $175,000, and he was slated to be arraigned later Monday in Hartford Superior Court.
Find out what's happening in Wethersfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Bean had initially been charged with second-degree breach of peace and interfering with an officer. He has been free on $10,000 bond while those charges are still pending, according to judicial records.
According to a police report, a uniformed officer assigned to the Wal-Mart was called into the store by security staffers because they had been watching a man, later identified as Bean, walking through several aisles.
Find out what's happening in Wethersfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Bean had no cart and appeared not to be shopping, but following children with his phone camera and then taking pictures of them when their mothers traveled out of the photo frames, police said in the report.
He was concealing his phone with a toy package, according to the report.
Members of Homeland Security Investigations conducted a forensic examination of Bean's cell phone and located voyeuristic videos of female children being recorded in public places within the store. Homeland Security Investigations forwarded the information to the Connecticut State Police Computer Crimes Unit for further investigation, police said.
A review of the voyeuristic videos revealed that there were four videos containing upskirt footage of female children while they were shopping in public places such as Wal-Mart and other stores. Through the course of the investigation, it was determined that Bean was the one who had taken the upskirt videos of the female children, according to police.
Photo courtesy of Connecticut State Police
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.