Security ... think about it!
After his roommates noticed suspicious lights and buzzing in August 2007, Wyllie was arrested. Eventually he pleaded guilty to charges of attempting to visually record the woman in question in a private place without her consent. Open and shut case, right? Not quite: Wyllie is now going free without a jail sentence. Why? Because Wyllie encrypted the videos he recorded on his computer. Unable to crack the codes, police were never able to see what he recorded, limiting the evidence they had to use against him. Lacking any hard evidence of wrongdoing outside of the camera setup, the judge had to go on the lenient side for sentencing, since there was no real proof he'd ever actually used it.