Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Girlfight goes online (aka What not to do as a parent)

Good lord. I stumbled on this article about a 13-year-old being driven to suicide after a former friend's parents created a faux Myspace page.

She told the Meiers that Josh Evans was created by adults, a family on their block. These adults, she told the Meiers, were the parents of Megan's former girlfriend, the one with whom she had a falling out. These were the people who'd asked the Meiers to store their foosball table.

The single mother, for this story, requested that her name not be used. She said her daughter, who had carpooled with the family that was involved in creating the phony MySpace account, had the password to the Josh Evans account and had sent one message - the one Megan received (and later retrieved off the hard drive) the night before she took her life.

"She had been encouraged to join in the joke," the single mother said.

The single mother said her daughter feels the guilt of not saying something sooner and for writing that message. Her daughter didn't speak out sooner because she'd known the other family for years and thought that what they were doing must be OK because, after all, they were trusted adults.

On the night the ambulance came for Megan, the single mother said, before it left the Meiers' house her daughter received a call. It was the woman behind the creation of the Josh Evans account. She had called to tell the girl that something had happened to Megan and advised the girl not to mention the MySpace account.


Another reason why I think that people need licenses to be parents. What the hell? And I love the fact that the mother behind the thing didn't feel guilty -- per the police report:

"According to (her) 'somehow' other 'my space' users were able to access the fake male profile and Megan found out she had been duped. (She) stated she knew 'arguments' had broken out between Megan and others on 'my space.' (She) felt this incident contributed to Megan's suicide, but she did not feel 'as guilty' because at the funeral she found out 'Megan had tried to commit suicide before.'"


Even though I know the Internet is kind of like the Wild West in that it's lawless and crazy -- I expect grown adults to act better than this. Especially when you're dealing with a kid. Good lord.

1 comment:

K. said...

The Internet makes people crazy. It's just a proven fact. Somewhere.

It amazes me just how psychotic seemingly grown adults can be.