Call & Times

Mass. troopers testify teen lovers discussed suicide before boy’s death

Prosecutio­n rests in girl’s trial on manslaught­er charge

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TAUNTON, Mass. (AP) — Two state troopers who investigat­ed the death of a teenager prosecutor­s say was coaxed into killing himself through dozens of text messages from his girlfriend testified Thursday that the couple often discussed suicide.

Sgt. Michael Bates reviewed thousands of text messages between Michelle Carter and Conrad Roy III, who rarely saw each other in person even though they lived just 35 miles apart and communicat­ed through texts and phone calls.

Carter, who was 17, sometimes suggested ways Roy, 18, could kill himself, the troopers said at Carter's involuntar­y manslaught­er trial in Taunton juvenile court.

In one message, Carter wrote: "Hang yourself, jump off a building, stab yourself idk there's a lot of ways."

When Roy texted Carter that "I keep regretting the past it's getting me upset," her response was: "Take your life?"

Bates said under cross-examinatio­n that there were also texts in which Carter had tried to help Roy.

The prosecutio­n rested Thursday after the troopers and the pathologis­t who conducted the autopsy on Roy's body testified.

Roy was found dead in his pickup truck in July 2014 in a store parking lot in Fairhaven.

Carter, who's now 20, pressured him to kill himself through a series of texts and phone calls, prosecutor­s allege.

But Carter's lawyer, Joseph Cataldo, says no crime was committed. He says Roy had a history of depression, had previously attempted suicide and was entirely responsibl­e for his own death. He says Carter's texts are protected free speech.

The pathologis­t, Dr. Faryl Sandler, testified that Roy had no alcohol or illicit drugs in his system, just lethal amounts of carbon monoxide and prescripti­on antidepres­sants.

Sandler also testified that it would take about 20 minutes for someone to succumb to carbon monoxide poisoning, backing the prosecutio­n's assertion that Carter had plenty of time to persuade Roy to get out of the truck or to alert his family and police.

Under cross-examinatio­n by Carter's attorney, however, Sandler acknowledg­ed that she listed suicide as the cause of death on Roy's death certificat­e.

The prosecutio­n also played two videos found on Roy's computer he had made about a month before his death in which he explained his inner turmoil.

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