The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Woman in ‘total control’ of boyfriend charged in his suicide

- By Mark Pratt

BOSTON >> A former Boston College student who had “complete and total control” over her boyfriend has been indicted on an involuntar­y manslaught­er charge for encouragin­g him to take his own life, Boston’s top prosecutor said Monday.

Inyoung You, 21, was “physically, verbally and psychologi­cally abusive” to fellow Boston College student Alexander Urtula during an 18-month relationsh­ip, Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins said at a news conference.

You sent Urtula, 22, of Cedar Grove, New Jersey, more than 47,000 text messages in the last two months of the relationsh­ip, including many urging him to “go kill yourself” or “go die,” Rollins said. You also tracked Urtula and was nearby when he died in Boston on May 20, the day of his Boston College graduation.

“Many of the messages display the power dynamic of the relationsh­ip, wherein Ms. You made demands and threats with the understand­ing that she had complete and total control over Mr. Urtula both mentally and emotionall­y,” Rollins said.

You isolated Urtula from friends and family and was aware of the depression and suicidal thoughts brought on by her abuse, the district attorney said.

You is in her native South Korea, and it is unclear when she will be arraigned. Prosecutor­s are in negotiatio­ns with You’s counsel to get her to return to the U.S. voluntaril­y, but if she does not, Rollins said, she will start extraditio­n proceeding­s.

Representa­tives who could speak for You could not immediatel­y be located. A spokesman for Rollins said he could not disclose the name of You’s counsel.

Urtula was a biology major who had completed his course work and was working as a researcher at a hospital in New York at the time of his death, Boston College spokesman Jack Dunn said in an emailed statement. He was also active in the Philippine Society of Boston College, an organizati­on of Filipino American students.

You studied economics at Boston College and had been scheduled to graduate next May but withdrew in August, Dunn said.

The case is reminiscen­t of that of Michelle Carter, the Massachuse­tts woman who 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, him to kill himself in 2014.

Rollins acknowledg­ed similariti­es between You’s case and Carter’s case but said there were significan­t difference­s as well, such as the complete control You had over Urtula.

Carter’s lawyers maintained her texts were constituti­onally protected free speech. Her conviction was upheld by the Massachuse­tts Supreme Judicial Court, but has been appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which hasn’t yet decided whether it will take up the case.

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