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Consultant caught masturbat!ng during work meeting

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Consultant caught masturbat!ng during work meeting

A consultant participating in a Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) panel meeting was caught on camera masturbating during a Zoom call.

The incident occurred on Friday afternoon when the LIPA Commission Advisory Committee was holding the discussion.

Towards the end of it, an executive from Georgia-based GDS Associates allegedly took off his clothes and began pleasuring himself, according to Rory Lancman, the executive director of the commission.

Lancman stated, “My first thought was that we’d been zoom bombed.

But then I saw a member of the consulting firm in a state of undress engaging in inappropriate behavior.

I shut my laptop down.

I was shocked and appalled.” The consultant attended the meeting virtually while many other members joined in-person in Farmingdale.

Lancman, who was running the virtual meeting from his computer, prematurely ended the discussion and called GDS Associates, ordering the deviant be taken off the consulting project.

GDS Associates has been looking into LIPA’s finances and operations on behalf of the LIPA Commission — a legislative advisory board created in 2022 to produce an action plan for more direct electric service to residents of Long Island and the Rockaways.

State Sen.

Kevin Thomas (D-Garden City), co-chairman of the Commission for the Future of the Long Island Power Authority, confirmed that the panel is working to remove the pervert.

He stated, “We are taking the appropriate actions to deal with this.

It is our policy to keep a safe, harassment-free work environment, and this individual will be removed from the project immediately.

This should not overshadow the important comprehensive work this Commission has done to date.”

GDS Associates president David Brian released a statement saying the company “expects the utmost integrity from its employees and any allegations of behavior inconsistent with our core values are being investigated.” This comes just two days after an online Brooklyn community board meeting was hijacked by another masturbating creep.

The man was caught pleasuring himself as a representative from Coney Island Health Center was talking about the high rate of s**ually transmitted diseases.

The zoom-bomber slung a series of vulgarities and racist words throughout the NSFW scene, forcing administrators to temporarily shut down the public discussion.

The incident highlights how individuals are exploiting virtual meetings to engage in inappropriate behavior.

In April 2020, an online meeting of the Supreme Court of the United States was interrupted by the sounds of a toilet flushing.

In another instance, a British MP was caught n^ked during a video call with colleagues.

As the pandemic forced people to work from home, remote meetings became commonplace, allowing employees to communicate and collaborate with colleagues from different parts of the world.

However, these incidents demonstrate that there is a need for better security measures to prevent such occurrences.

Zoom, one of the most popular video conferencing tools, has come under scrutiny for its security flaws, which have allowed hackers to infiltrate and disrupt meetings.

The company has since implemented measures to improve its security, including end-to-end encryption and two-factor authentication.

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