Toronto Star

Social media fuelling attacks on celebritie­s

Senior FBI official’s study finds that online fame can lead to being targeted

- MICHAEL S. ROSENWALD

Social media has altered the motives and targets of those who set out to kill public figures, spreading the threat beyond politician­s to music stars, athletes and other pop-culture icons, according to a new study by a senior FBI official and a prominent forensic psychologi­st.

The study, which will be published online Wednesday in the journal Behavioral Sciences and the Law, aims to update a landmark Secret Service report that examined attacks on public figures between 1949 and 1995, ending with Ted (Unabomber) Kaczysnki.

That report, which looked at 83 attackers, found that 68 per cent of targets were government or judicial figures, while 19 per cent were celebritie­s. The new study is narrower — 58 attackers from 1995 to 2015 — but it found that 38 per cent targeted government or judicial figures while 34 per cent focused on movie, sports and media celebritie­s.

The authors attribute that shift to Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other social media, which have fuelled a culture of celebrity and created an illusion of intimacy with stars.

For some attackers, especially the one-third who are delusional, this digital relationsh­ip feels like a personal connection, with a seemingly two-way conversati­on that amplifies infatuatio­n.

At the same time, the public figures traditiona­lly stalked by assassins — politician­s and other government officials — have lost some of their appeal, the study found. They aren’t seen as powerful symbols whose deaths will provide eternal infamy. Rather, attackers blame them for their troubled lives and are seeking retributio­n — a motive that puts popculture figures at risk as well.

“These attacks are now angry and personal,” said J. Reid Meloy, the lead author of the new paper and a professor of forensic psychiatry at the University of California at San Diego. “They don’t want fame. They want revenge for some perceived wrong.”

Meloy and co-author Molly Amman, the program manager in the FBI behavioral-analysis unit that studies targeted attacks, coined a term for this new breed of targets: publicly intimate figures. And social media doesn’t just offer attackers this faux connection. It can also tip them off to where a target might soon be.

In the paper, the authors describe dozens of victims who are public figures: Paris Hilton, attacked outside a courthouse by a stalker; Tom Brokaw, targeted with anthrax, allegedly by a disgruntle­d researcher wanting more money; and Roanoke television reporter Alison Parker, killed on live TV by an angry former co-worker.

Given the timeline of the study, the authors could not include this summer’s fatal shooting of Christina Grimmie, a former singer on The Voice, by a man obsessed with her social-media posts. He lost weight and became a vegan to try to win her heart. But that attack, Meloy said, is an important example of his study’s findings.

The authors argue that fame has become a lesser motive in attacks on public figures because social media provides the opportunit­y for anyone to become a star. “One could observe that it may be less necessary than in the past to engage in assassinat­ion in order to become famous,” they write. “The Internet and social media make it possible for anyone with access to technology to achieve fame with little effort.”

Instead, attackers target public figures out of anger for some slight, real or perceived.

The study did find numerous aspects of attacks on public figures that have remained constant. The attackers are almost always male. They are often mentally disturbed.

They don’t make direct threats before taking action.

 ?? DONALD BOWER/GETTY IMAGES FOR UNITAS ?? Paris Hilton was attacked by a stalker in 2011 outside a courthouse.
DONALD BOWER/GETTY IMAGES FOR UNITAS Paris Hilton was attacked by a stalker in 2011 outside a courthouse.

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