Judge Kathe Tuttman sentenced Browar-Jarus to two years in the House of Correction, with one year suspended, for five years, prosecutors said.

Teddy Browar-Jarus, 34, was convicted of 25 counts of secretly recording a person in a state of nudity, 11 counts of willful interception of oral communication and one count of attempting to commit a crime during a Superior Court bench trial on June 8, the Middlesex district attorney’s office said in a press release.

A Somerville man was sentenced Thursday to two-years in jail for secretly video recording naked women, the Middlesex district attorney’s office said.

After his release, he will remain on probation for five years. He must perform 100 hours of community service, and pay restitution to his victims. Browar-Jarus must also seek continue to seek counseling. He was ordered not to contact the victims, or identify them publicly, the release stated.


Browar-Jarus was accused of secretly video taping an unidentified woman, with whom he was acquainted, in 2015. The woman heard a beeping on her book shelf and discovered a cell phone with a camera facing her bed, according to the press release. The home screen on the cell phone said “Teddy” and police were able to obtain a search warrant for Browar-Jarus’ home.

During the search, officers recovered multiple electronic devices and the remains of a broken “hook” camera, which is “designed to look like a plastic hook commonly found fastened to bathroom doors,” prosecutors said.

Officers also found portable hard drives and discovered that Browar-Jarus had used the hook camera to secretly recorded women entering and exiting the shower in two bathrooms, according to the release. They also found videos of Browar-Jarus’ female roommates in their bedrooms, and videos of women having sex with Browar-Jarus that were recorded without their consent or knowledge.


“This defendant committed the ultimate invasion of privacy by intentionally recording women in various states of undress without their permission or knowledge,” District Attorney Marian Ryan said in a statement. “This type of behavior takes away the sense of security and the right to privacy that we are all entitled to.”

Adam Sennott can be reached at adam.sennott@globe.com