WINDSOR, ONT.—Changes are being made to the Windsor Public Library after online sex shows were discovered being broadcast from select branches earlier this year.

The library board has decided that sight-lines in branches will be improved and more staff will be in place to monitor patrons’ activity.

All branches will also have stronger computer filters in place to block inappropriate websites.

Board Chair Peter Fries says the changes ought to prevent a repeat of the streaming scandal that led to a Windsor woman being charged.

He says the library is always looking for ways to make sure all its patrons are safe.

An investigation was launched after police received reports about raunchy sex videos circulating on online forums that showed a woman exposing herself and masturbating inside what appeared to be Windsor public libraries.

A 21-year-old woman eventually turned herself into police and was charged in March with one count of committing an indecent act.

Police have said the woman used her own laptop computer to stream the videos and would cover herself when someone walked by.

Police say they are confident some of the videos were shot at Windsor library branches, while others appear to have been made at Tim Hortons’ coffee shops.

A Mar. 4 story in the Toronto Star by reporter Peter Edwards revealed that the woman was a stripper who broadcast live pornography from inside Windsor, Ont. public libraries. She was fired by an online forum network for taking her raunchy act too far.

“Yes, this former model was terminated as a contract model for violating company policy,” said Lawrence G. Walters of Pinewood, Fla. in an email interview at the time.

Walters is a lawyer representing myfreecams.com, which broadcasts Internet pornography.

The stripper was a model who worked for an online pornography broadcaster and shot her videos from various Windsor library branches.

Walters said he couldn’t give the identity of the stripper, who worked under the name “lilsecrett.”

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Windsor Public Library CEO Kitty Pope said, in early March, that the woman was ejected from a library branch in January when she refused to provide her name.

Before that, she reportedly secretly broadcast 52 shows from various library branches over a three-month span.