It’s business as usual at the Windsor Public Library, despite reports of a woman broadcasting live online pornography from amongst its stacks.

“We’ve turned it over to the police,” library CEO Kitty Pope said in an interview on Tuesday.

The woman flashed everything but her library card in the broadcasts from a portable camera so staff doesn’t know her identity, Pope said.

“We have no idea who the person was,” Pope said.

CBC Windsor broke the story that she had broadcast 52 online porn performances from the library between November and late January.

Her performances were at several branches of the library, Pope said.

They were done under the online name of “lilsecrett” for an American-based online website, CBC reported.

“We work very hard at the Windsor Public Library to make it a safe place but it’s still a public building,” Pope said.

Pope said the library has the right to eject people exhibiting ‘inappropriate’ behaviour, or behaviour that runs the gamut from shredding a book to shedding clothes.

“We certainly have heard about inappropriate behaviour before,” said Pope, who has worked in libraries for 35 years. “This particular version of inappropriate behaviour, we haven’t seen before.”

She said that staff noticed a “young woman was taking inappropriate photos of herself,” in January.

“We asked her to leave,” Pope said. “She left.”

When asked if there has been an influx of 17-year-old boys to the library since the news broke, Pope replied, “I hope not.”