Photo by J Sonder

Photo by J Sonder

>> Three teenage boys from Fairfax County were yesterday found guilty of felony charges stemming from incidents where they taped each other having sex with girls, reports the Post. The three boys made six recordings of their sexual encounters since last year; none of the girls in the videos consented to being recording. The boys said that alcohol played a role in the decision to record their escapades, which they called pranks.

>> Teachers at D.C. public schools will not supervise standardized testing in their own classrooms next week, writes the Examiner. The move, announced yesterday by D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson, is a step towards tamping on down on allegations of cheating that have dogged the school system since at least 2008. A D.C. councilmember has introduced a bill that would make cheating on the tests a crime; recent reports have found high erasure rates in some schools, indicating that teachers or administrators altered tests to ensure higher scores.

>> Despite not getting funding from the federal government, Arlington County officials say they will press forward with a $250 million streetcar line on Columbia Pike, reports WAMU. Opponents of the project, though, say that bus rapid transit is a more cost-effective alternative.

Briefly Noted: Early voting in D.C. ends tomorrow, fewer than 2,000 residents have so far cast ballots … Campaign donor treated Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell to a lakeside vacation … Revenue from D.C. traffic cameras drop in March … D.C. parking ticket appeal settled after two years … Opponents of new Maryland gun control bill will not pursue referendum … Hey MPD, how about you lock some doors?

This Day in DCist: On this day in 2012, Anthony Williams made a public return to D.C. politics and hackers launched DDOS attacks on D.C. government servers. In 2011, we finally discovered the sources of those loud morning blasts from Arlington.