Published: 10:55AM Friday May 16, 2008
Source: Reuters
A 49-year-old Missouri woman accused of pretending to be a
love-struck teenage boy on MySpace and driving a 13-year-old girl
to suicide with cruel messages was indicted on federal
charges.
Prosecutors say Lori Drew and others created the fake MySpace
persona of a 16-year-old boy to woo neighbour Megan Meier for
several weeks, then abruptly ended the relationship and said the
world would be better off without her.
Meier's 2006 suicide by hanging, just hours after she read those
final messages, made world-wide headlines and prompted calls for
social networking sites like MySpace to crack down on
cyber-bullying.
"This adult woman allegedly used the Internet to target a young
teenage girl, with horrendous ramifications," US Attorney Thomas
O'Brien said in announcing the indictment in Los Angeles, where
MySpace is based.
"Any adult who uses the Internet or a social gathering website to
bully or harass another person, particularly a young teenage girl,
needs to realize that their actions can have serious consequences,"
O'Brien said.
Experts said the indictment, which was handed down in Los Angeles
after Missouri authorities declined to prosecute Drew, was a first
of its kind and could stretch the bounds of the federal statute on
which it was based.
"We are in uncharted waters here," University of Southern
California law professor and former federal prosecutor Rebecca
Lonergan said. "This case is unprecedented and it's also a very
aggressive charging decision."
Lonergan said Drew was charged with accessing a protected computer
to obtain information, a statute typically used against defendants
who hack into government computers.
"While I think most people agree that it merits punishment to
harass a young girl to the point where she commits suicide, it's
not clear that this conduct is covered by this federal statute,"
she said.
A fictional boy
Prosecutors say Drew, mother of a teenage girl who had a falling
out with Meier, and several others created a profile for the
fictional Josh Evans, using the picture of an unwitting teenage
boy.
They then contacted Meier, who lived four doors away in O'Fallon,
Missouri, through MySpace as Josh and spent several weeks flirting
with her before ending the relationship on October 15, 2006.
Several hours after the final message, Meier, who had argued with
her mother over the relationship, hanged herself in the closet of
her bedroom in a St Louis suburb, still unaware that Josh did not
exist.
The indictment charges that after Meier killed herself, Drew had
the phony MySpace account deleted and warned a girl who knew about
it that she should keep her mouth shut.
After the incident became widely known, the Drew family was shunned
by members of the community, targeted for abuse on the internet and
their small advertising business was vandalized.
Drew, who faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison if
she is convicted on all of the charges, was expected to surrender
to authorities in Missouri.
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