Times Colonist

Teen accused of inciting friend to kill himself

Text messages urged 18-year-old to end life: ‘You just have to do it’

- DENISE LAVOIE

FAIRHAVEN, Massachuse­tts — At first glance, the text messages appear to show a disturbing case of cyberbully­ing: one teen urging another to kill himself.

But the texts were not sent by a school bully. They were from a 17-year-old girl to her boyfriend, whom she called the love of her life.

“You can’t think about it. You just have to do it. You said you were gonna do it. Like I don’t get why you aren’t,” Michelle Carter allegedly wrote to Conrad Roy III the day he parked his truck outside a Fairhaven Kmart and killed himself through carbon monoxide poisoning.

Prosecutor­s have charged Carter with involuntar­y manslaught­er in Roy’s 2014 death. They say that in the week before Roy killed himself, Carter assisted by urging him to overcome his doubts about taking his own life, pressuring him to do it and even telling him to get back in his truck after becoming frightened that the plan was working.

Carter’s lawyer has strenuousl­y denied that she pushed him to kill himself and has asked a judge to dismiss the case.

In their written response, prosecutor­s included text exchanges between Carter and Roy that they say support their claim that Carter caused her boyfriend’s death by “wantonly and recklessly” helping him poison himself.

Roy, 18, had a history of depression and had attempted suicide two years earlier, taking an overdose of the painkiller acetaminop­hen.

“You can’t keep living this way. You just need to do it like you did the last time and not think about it and just do it, babe,” Carter texted him.

Carter’s lawyer, Joseph Cataldo, said her texts amount to speech protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on. He said it’s clear from the exchanges that Roy had made up his mind to take his own life and Carter, now 18, did not cause his death.

“He got the generator, he devised the plan and he had to go find a spot. He parked, he had to get the gas for the generator, he had to turn the generator on, he had to sit in that car for a long period of time. He caused his own death,” Cataldo said.

After his earlier suicide attempt, Roy spent time in a psychiatri­c hospital and received counsellin­g, said his aunt, Becki Maki. In the weeks before his death, he was excited about graduating from high school and receiving his sea captain’s licence, she said.

“He did not have the signs of someone who was considerin­g that,” Maki said.

Carter and Roy met about two years earlier while each was visiting relatives in Florida. They kept in touch, mostly through texts and email, upon returning to Massachuse­tts. They lived about 80 kilometres apart and hadn’t seen each other for about a year before Roy died.

Roy used a gasolineop­erated water pump to poison himself with carbon monoxide.

While discussing the plan, Carter appears to taunt Roy. “But I bet you’re gonna be like ‘oh, it didn’t work because I didn’t tape the tube right or something like that,” she wrote. “I bet you’re gonna say an excuse like that … you seem to always have an excuse.”

Cataldo said Carter had tried to talk Roy out of killing himself and decided to support his plan only when it became clear she could not change his mind.

 ??  ?? Left: Michelle Carter listens to her lawyer, Joseph Cataldo. Right: Conrad Roy III graduates from high school last year.
Left: Michelle Carter listens to her lawyer, Joseph Cataldo. Right: Conrad Roy III graduates from high school last year.
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