• Robert W add a quote by Richard G. Scott July 5, 2012
    "Sadness, disappointment, and severe challenge are events in life, not life itself. I do not minimize how hard some of these events are. They can extend over a long period of time, but they should not be allowed to become the confining center of everything you do. The Lord inspired Lehi to declare the fundamental truth, “Men are, that they might have jo […]

A suicide victim and the town that turned on her cyber-bully

By Leonard Doyle in Washington

Published: 24 November 2007

For almost a year, the families that live on Waterford Crystal Drive kept quiet about the MySpace tragedy. Not any more.

When
Megan Meier’s family moved to the neighbourhood, a brand new
family-oriented development near St Louis, they hoped that their
troubled 13-year-old would make friends.

Like millions of teenagers marooned amid the malls of suburbia,
Megan turned to the online networking site MySpace for friendship. When
“Josh Evans” started to exchange messages with her, Megan, a
13-year-old suffering from depression and attention deficit disorder,
was elated.

Their friendship lasted about a month. Then “Josh” brutally ended
it, telling her that he had heard she was a bad person. That night, 16
October 2006, Megan hanged herself in her room.

When the truth about “Josh” emerged six weeks later, her devastated
parents suffered another blow. It turned out that an adult neighbour
called Lori Drew who had fallen out with her daughter had pretended to
be the 16-year-old Josh to gain the trust of Megan.

Megan’s parents, Tina and Ron Meier, asked their other neighbours to
not to discuss what had happened, while waiting for the police to take
action. But nothing happened: there is no law against being cruel and
immature. Local papers refused to identify the Drew family, to protect
their teenage daughter.

But now, bloggers have taken on Megan’s cause, with an outburst of
virtual vigilantism. The Los Angeles Times reported yesterday that
dozens of people have apparently been calling local businesses that
work with the Drew family’s company, which prints advertising. The
Drews’ home address, phone numbers, email addresses and photographs
have also been posted on blogs such as RottenNeighbor.com and
hitsusa.com. And there are reports that people are driving through the
once tranquil neighbourhood in the middle of the night, screaming,
“Murderer!”

To protect themselves to from vigilantes, the Drews, have placed
security cameras on the roof of their house. They have also refused to
talk to the media.

Megan’s parents want to see the Drews prosecuted, and they want
changes to the law to safeguard children on the internet. With cases of
cyber-bullying being reported all over the country, their cause has the
potential to become a nationwide movement.

Mrs Meier doesn’t believe that anyone involved actually intended for
her daughter to kill herself. “But when adults are involved and
continue to screw with a 13-year-old, with or without mental problems,
it is absolutely vile,” she said.

Described as a “bubbly, goofy” girl who loved fishing with her dad,
Megan struck up a friendship with “Josh” who told her that he was born
in Florida and had recently moved to a nearby community called
O’Fallon. Then he dropped her, telling her on 15 October last year that
he had heard she wasn’t nice to her friends.

The following day, Mrs Meier was taking another daughter to the
orthodontist, and asked Megan to log off MySpace, where users must be
at least 14. Megan called her mother, saying that messages were being
posted about her saying: “Megan Meier is a slut. Megan Meier is fat.”

After a row, Megan ran upstairs. Her father tried to reassure her
that everything would be fine. Twenty minutes later, she was found
dead. Mr Meier said he found a message the next day from “Josh”,
telling her she was a bad person and the world would be better without
her.

Now police cars are patrolling Waterford Crystal Drive and prosecutors are trying to reopen the case.

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