As a Sun Microsystems engineer, Patrick Naughton had become frustrated with the state of Sun's C++ and CAPIs (application programming interfaces) and tools.[citation needed] While considering moving to NeXT, Naughton was offered a chance to work on new technology and thus the Stealth Project was started.[citation needed]
The Stealth Project was soon renamed to the Green Project with James Gosling and Mike Sheridan joining Naughton. Together with other engineers, they began work in a small office on Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, California. They were attempting to develop a new technology for programming next generation smart appliances, which Sun expected to be a major new opportunity.[8][self-published source][9]
In June and July 1994, after three days of brainstorming with John Gage, the Director of Science for Sun, James Gosling, Bill Joy, Naughton, Wayne Rosing, and Eric Schmidt, the team re-targeted the platform for the World Wide Web. They felt that with the advent of the first graphical web browser, Mosaic, the Internet was on its way to evolving into the same highly interactive medium that they had envisioned for cable TV. As a prototype, Naughton wrote a small browser, WebRunner, later renamed HotJava.[10]
After his arrest in 1999, Naughton was fired from Infoseek.[4]
Sex crime arrest and conviction
On Sept. 14, 1999, Naughton flew from Seattle to Los Angeles on a private Disney jet.[11] expecting a five-foot, blonde haired 13-year-old
girl to wait on the pier near the roller coaster, carrying a green backpack as instructed by Naughton.[2] Naughton had
written to her about love and sex and that he "wanted to get
[her] alone in his hotel room and have [her] strip naked for him".[2] Naughton had arranged this meeting, posing as "Hot Seattle", his online predator handle[3] in an online chat room called "dad&daughtersex."[12] The "girl" was actually an FBI agent.[6]
Two days later, he was arrested by the FBI and was charged with traveling in interstate commerce with the intent to have sex with a minor, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §2423(b).[3][4][5] After a trial ended in a hung jury, Naughton struck a plea agreement where he took a reduced sentence and admitted that he traveled from Seattle to Los Angeles last September with a "dominant purpose" to engage in sexual acts with "KrisLA", an online chat buddy he believed was a 13-year-old girl.[1] He ended up serving no prison time, in exchange for working for the FBI for free for a year.[13][14]
Novel defense
His line of defense was that he claimed he was persuaded to participate online in a ritualized sexual role-playing exercise, dealing with a mature woman acting as a girl.[14] His then-novel defense, became known as the fantasy defense for pedophiles.[2]
^ ab"Paper 2: Legal Treatment Of Online Identity". emoglen.law.columbia.edu. 2006-04-29. Archived from the original on 2008-11-19. Retrieved 2009-08-02. At his criminal trial, Naughton employed what has come to be known as the "fantasy defense": citing his technical sophistication and the adult tone of his interlocutor's conversation, he claimed that he believed her to be an adult woman playing the role of a teenage girl; which, indeed, she was, although for different reasons from those Naughton claimed to have believed.