The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Consequenc­es of social media threat

Cobb man knows the impact a comment can have on one’s life.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com and Asia Burns Asia.Burns@ajc.com

On Monday, Caleb Jamaal Clemmons did what nearly every other 25-year-old does when he wakes up. He logged onto his social media accounts.

For the first time in five years, he logged on to Tumblr and wrote:

Entire Days: *Standing in the street*

Then, unlike most 25-year-olds, he did just that. Stood in the street. Or wandered around his makeshift Smyrna neighborho­od.

“I wanted to give a perceptive glance of what the journey has been for me,” Clemmons said of his Tumblr post. “There were days when just entire 24 hours I have just been standing in the street and ambling around Cobb County. They were notes from the experience.”

For five years, Clemmons has been in limbo fueled by men- tal illness and homelessne­ss. It began with a social media post.

In February 2013, the psychology major was jailed and kicked out of Georgia Southern University for the Tumblr blog post he wrote under the pseudonym, “irenigg:” Hello. my name is irenigg and i plan on shooting up georgia southern. pass this around to see the affect it has. to see if i get arrested.

Three hours after his post, police came to his dorm. They found no weapons or evidence of a planned attack, but he was charged with making terroristi­c threats.

“Honestly, it was an initial numbness, then there was a

panic. It was like my mind was blown away,” Clemmons said. “I thought I was gonna be able to explain my way out of it. I thought I was gonna go home.”

Instead, he sat in the Bulloch County Jail for six months because his family couldn’t afford his $20,000 bail. He was eventually sentenced to five years of probation and prohibited from using any social media during that time.

Clemmons maintains that his post was a provocativ­e joke — he wanted to see how long it would take for it to get noticed or for him to get arrested. Now he acknowledg­es that it was a mistake.

“I wanted to see if it would manifest into something and get a few scares. As a person who is prone to humor, it was the kind of thing that would entertain,” Clemmons said. “That was the weight of it. Nothing deep at all. But I see now that it was a momentary lapse of judgment.”

Threat or free speech?

There is never a good time to post even the vaguest of threats, even as an experiment. But Clemmons’ post could not have come at a worse time — just two months after 20 children and six adults were killed during the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December 2012. And a week before his post, a student at Price Middle School in Atlanta was killed on campus in a targeted shooting.

Between the Columbine High School shooting in 1999 and Clemmons’ threatenin­g post, there were 143 school shootings in America, includ- ing the Virginia Tech massacre that left 32 dead on a college campus.

“It comes down to a few different things: was it a true threat, or was it some- thing he said in jest?” Adelphi University internet law and digital ethics professor Mark Grabowski said. “If the statement can be reasonably interprete­d by people as a joke, then it might not be considered a true threat. But if a court interprets that a message was intentiona­lly threatenin­g, it is treated as a threat regardless of whether the messenger has the means to carry the act out.”

Danica Kombol, a social media strategist and CEO of the Atlanta-based Every- where Agency, compares it to screaming “fire” in a crowded movie theater. The fire might not be there, but the fear and panic — and therefore the threat — is real.

“Federal law has been criminaliz­ing communi- cating threats since 1939,” Kombol said. “Just because it is social media, should he be exempt from those laws?”

Earlier this month, More- house College launched an investigat­ion into comments made by a student who suggested he planned to “shoot up” the Atlanta school. The student complained in a Twitter post about being on hold for three hours with the college’s financial aid office and wrote: “I’ve decided to become the first black man to shoot up a school.”

In the street

Since his arrest and parole sentence in 2013, Clemmons has essentiall­y been home- less. While wandering neigh- borhoods in 2014, he was charged with trespassin­g and given an 11-month jail sentence. During that jail stay, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

“His time in jail worsened his condition. This is a kid that had never been in trou- ble. He just wanted attention,” his grandmothe­r Mary Jackson said.

On any given day, Clem- mons just walks. Usually to a branch of the Cobb County Library off South Cobb Drive.

Several people along South Cobb Drive near its intersecti­on with I-285, noticed how out of place he looked walk- ing along the affluent but busy stretch, and reached out to help.

“I noticed him a month before I spoke to him,” said Angie Ross, who lives in the neighborho­od and spotted Clemmons in July. “People would call the police on him and I didn’t know what to think about him either — until I stopped and talked to him.” In early August, Ross posted a long message on the Nextdoor neighborho­od message board telling people who Clemmons was and seek- ing help for him. It worked.

Ross took Clemmons to doctor and social services appointmen­ts, while others have stepped up with food and clothes. Lawyers have reached out to Ross offering free legal aide and someone offered to pay for his medicines. Through Nextdoor, Ross also got a long, detailed message from some- one in social services offer- ing guidance.

“Caleb has an innocence about him,” said another neighbor Karla Szaflarski, who has been in charge of collecting donations. “It has been life-changing to see how people have been so selfless and compassion­ate.”

Finding help

On the day after his social media ban is lifted, Clemmons is seated at a neighborho­od pool talking to Ross when Szaflarski approaches with a soft drink and breakfast biscuit. He likes the outdoors and can’t stand confined places or being touched or touching some things.

As Szaflarski and Ross chat, Clemmons methodical­ly and quietly crumbles the biscuit, still in the wrapper, between his thumb and index finger. He then opens the wrapper and eats the biscuit like an ice cream cone, never touching the contents with his hands. Crumbs spill down his shirt, but he ignores it.

“I want to see Caleb thrive and have his potential reach its peak,” Szaflarski said. “I want to see him go through the worst and experience the best.”

It’s unclear what comes next for Clemmons.

His grandmothe­r said she talks to him daily, but said she is not equipped to take him in.

“People are trying to get him good mental health,” Mary Jackson said. “This is the best shot he has had in getting quality help.”

On Thursday, Ross took him to see the county’s mental health specialist, where he received medicine and a new case worker. “It may take up to six months to get him permanent housing, but they will look into something temporary that is suitable for his illness,” Ross said. Meanwhile, Clemmons said he just wants to write and become a famous blogger. But he has a warning for people who might follow him. “Honestly, what happened to me was appropriat­e. There had to be an example set so that people understand that what I did is not something that can be tolerated,” Clemmons said. “It was fair. I was just more disappoint­ed with myself. So, consider what you are doing. Consider the isolation and the consequenc­es.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? In February 2013, then psychology major Caleb Jamaal Clemmons was jailed and kicked out of Georgia Southern University for the Tumblr blog post he wrote. Three hours after his post, police came to his dorm. They found no weapons or evidence of a planned attack, but he was charged with making terroristi­c threats.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM In February 2013, then psychology major Caleb Jamaal Clemmons was jailed and kicked out of Georgia Southern University for the Tumblr blog post he wrote. Three hours after his post, police came to his dorm. They found no weapons or evidence of a planned attack, but he was charged with making terroristi­c threats.
 ??  ?? Caleb Clemmons, now 25 years old, maintains that his 2013 post was a provocativ­e joke — he wanted to see how long it would take for it to get noticed or for him to get arrested. Now he acknowledg­es that it was a mistake.
Caleb Clemmons, now 25 years old, maintains that his 2013 post was a provocativ­e joke — he wanted to see how long it would take for it to get noticed or for him to get arrested. Now he acknowledg­es that it was a mistake.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Caleb Clemmons jokes with Karla Szaflarski (not pictured) while he uses the internet on a computer at the Oakley Run leasing office in Smyrna. Caleb met Karla at a local Cobb County library. After hearing his story, Karla invited Caleb to hang out at the leasing office while she worked.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Caleb Clemmons jokes with Karla Szaflarski (not pictured) while he uses the internet on a computer at the Oakley Run leasing office in Smyrna. Caleb met Karla at a local Cobb County library. After hearing his story, Karla invited Caleb to hang out at the leasing office while she worked.

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