Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Not guilty plea for woman charged in boyfriend’s suicide

- By Philip Marcelo

BOSTON — A former Boston College student has pleaded not guilty in her first court appearance on charges that she encouraged her boyfriend to take his own life in what prosecutor­s described as a toxic and abusive relationsh­ip.

Inyoung You, 21, pleaded not guilty to involuntar­y manslaught­er in Suffolk County Superior Court in Boston after prosecutor­s say she voluntaril­y returned to the U.S. from South Korea, where she has been at least since the charges were announced in October.

You didn’t speak during the proceeding­s Friday. She was taken into custody in handcuffs after the judge set her bail at $5,000. She posted bail soon afterward and was released.

You, who was born in South Korea and is a naturalize­d U.S. citizen, was also ordered to surrender her passport and remain in Massachuse­tts. Her next court date is in January, and her case won’t go to trial until November 2020.

Prosecutor­s say You and Alexander Urtula, 22, of Cedar Grove, New Jersey, exchanged more than 75,000 texts in the last two months of their turbulent, 18-month relationsh­ip, with You sending the majority of them.

They say You isolated Urtula from his friends, urged him multiple times to “go kill yourself” and called him “worthless” in a constant barrage of messages.

Urtula died in Boston on May 20, just minutes before his Boston College graduation.

During You’s arraignmen­t, assistant prosecutor Caitlin Grasso said the two Boston College students had met through the university’s Filipino student society.

But You, she said, became upset after learning Urtula was still communicat­ing with an ex-girlfriend.

Grasso read from some of the thousands messages You sent to Urtula, many laden with expletives and sent in one-word bursts and capital letters.

She also detailed how You, who withdrew from the university over the summer, forced Urtula to block his friends on social media and regularly monitored his location through his smartphone’s GPS.

“The defendant became physically, verbally, and psychologi­cally abusive,” Grasso said.

Urtula had no mental health problems prior to the relationsh­ip, Grasso said, but in the months before his death had written in his journal that You “attacks my self-worth.”

He also said he feared leaving her because she threatened to harm herself and blame him for it, Grasso said.

“These text messages demonstrat­e the power dynamic of the relationsh­ip,” she said. The couple discussed “how the defendant owned Urtula, how he was her slave, and how Mr. Urtula ceded his autonomy to the defendant,” Grasso said.

You knew nearly an hour before Urtula’s death exactly where he was and didn’t call police or seek help, Grasso said.

A full accounting of the couple’s more than 75,000 texts hasn’t been released, but You, through a public relations firm, released messages last week that suggest she tried to stop Urtula and was in contact with his brother in the moments before his death.

“please baby i’m almost there please,” she wrote. “please don’t push me away PLEASE DON’T LEAVE ME PLEASE.”

Urtula responds at one point: “this is goodbye forever. I love you. This isn’t your fault it’s mine.”

After Friday’s proceeding­s, You’s lawyer Steve Kim dismissed the case as a “cheap pursuit of headlines” that has wrongly portrayed his client as a “monster.”

You and Urtula were “emotionall­y needy young adults” who both contribute­d to turning their relationsh­ip into a “toxic blend of need, anger, fear and love,” he said.

The case grimly echoes that of Michelle Carter, who garnered headlines and an HBO film.

The young Massachuse­tts woman was sentenced to 15 months in jail after she was convicted in 2017 of involuntar­y manslaught­er for using text messages and phone calls to encourage her boyfriend, Conrad Roy, to kill himself in 2014.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP ?? You leaves Suffolk Superior Court on Friday in Boston after pleading not guilty to involuntar­y manslaught­er.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP You leaves Suffolk Superior Court on Friday in Boston after pleading not guilty to involuntar­y manslaught­er.

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