Teen's cyber suicide

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tesla

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Nov 22, 6:58 AM (ET)

By RASHA MADKOUR

MIAMI (AP) - The family of a college student who killed himself live on the Internet say they're horrified his life ended before a virtual audience, and infuriated that viewers of the live webcam or operators of the Web site that hosted it didn't act sooner to save him.
Only after police arrived to find Abraham Biggs dead in his father's bed did the Web feed stop Wednesday - 12 hours after the 19-year-old Broward College student first declared on a Web site that he hated himself and planned to die.
"It didn't have to be," said the victim's sister, Rosalind Bigg. "They got hits, they got viewers, nothing happened for hours."
Biggs announced his plans to kill himself over a Web site for bodybuilders, authorities said. He posted a link from there to Justin.tv, a site that allows users to broadcast live videos from their webcams.
A computer user who claimed to have watched said that after swallowing some pills, Biggs went to sleep and appeared to be breathing for a few hours while others cracked jokes.
Some members of his virtual audience encouraged him to do it, others tried to talk him out of it, and some discussed whether he was taking a dose big enough to kill himself, said Wendy Crane, an investigator with the Broward County medical examiner's office.
Some users told investigators they did not take him seriously because he had threatened suicide on the site before.
Eventually, someone notified the moderator of the bodybuilding site, who traced Biggs' location and called police, Crane said. The drama unfolded live on Justin.tv, which allows viewers to post comments alongside the video images.
As police entered the room, the audience's reaction was filled with Internet shorthand: "OMFG," one wrote, meaning "Oh, my God." Others, either not knowing what they were seeing, or not caring, wrote "lol," which means "laughing out loud," and "hahahah."
His father, Abraham Biggs Sr., told The Miami Herald he didn't want to watch the video.
"We were very good friends," he said. "It's wrong that it was allowed to happen."
An autopsy concluded Biggs died from a combination of opiates and benzodiazepine, which his family said was prescribed for his bipolar disorder.
"Abe, i still wish this was all a joke," a friend wrote on the teenager's MySpace page, which he described himself as a goodhearted guy who would always be available for his pals, no matter what time of day.
In a statement, Justin.tv CEO Michael Seibel said: "We regret that this has occurred and want to respect the privacy of the broadcaster and his family during this time."
It is unclear how many people watched it happen. The Web site would not say how many people were watching the broadcast. The site as a whole had 672,000 unique visitors in October, according to Nielsen.
Biggs was not the first person to commit suicide with a webcam rolling. But the drawn-out drama - and the reaction of those watching - was seen as an extreme example of young people's penchant for sharing intimate details about themselves over the Internet.
Montana Miller, an assistant professor of popular culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, said Biggs' very public suicide was not shocking, given the way teenagers chronicle every facet of their lives on sites like Facebook and MySpace.
"If it's not recorded or documented then it doesn't even seem worthwhile," she said. "For today's generation it might seem, 'What's the point of doing it if everyone isn't going to see it?'"
She likened Biggs' death to other public ways of committing suicide, like jumping off a bridge.
Crane said she knows of a case in which a Florida man shot himself in the head in front of an online audience, though she didn't know how much viewers saw. In Britain last year, a man hanged himself while chatting online.
Miami lawyer William Hill said there is probably nothing that could be done legally to those who watched and did not act. As for whether the Web site could be held liable, Hill said there doesn't seem to be much of a case for negligence.
"There could conceivably be some liability if they knew this was happening and they had some ability to intervene and didn't take action," said Hill, who does business litigation and has represented a number of Internet-based clients. But "I think it would be a stretch."
Condolences poured into Biggs' MySpace page, where the mostly unsmiling teen is seen posing in a series of pictures with various young women. On the bodybuilding Web site, Biggs used the screen name CandyJunkie. His Justin.tv alias was "feels_like_ecstacy."
Bigg described her brother as an outgoing person who struck up conversations with Starbucks baristas and enjoyed taking his young nieces to Chuck E. Cheese. He was health-conscious and exercised but was not a bodybuilder, she said.
"This is very, very sudden and unexpected for us," the sister said. "It boggles the mind. We don't understand."
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Sad no one did anything till it was to late
 
What's sad is all those people that watched it for hours cheering him on.
 
I agree Tesla, when I saw that on the news I couldn't believe it. Seems as though many people in this world are becoming more cynical every day. It is very sad.
 
I wonder if all those people that watched him die, if they were in that room with him,what would they have done?
Just because it was on the internet it was alright?
Just because you personally don't know him made it all right?
Is this the new Generation?
I think those people were moraly bankrupted.
More questions than answers here.
 
This seems to be a growing trend, it is not the first time ive heard of it.

People watching on the net go into a ghost like non reality, is it real?, is it a joke? is it set up?

The person committing suicide obviously has some form of mental instability, who do you blame?

Is there a blame?

My initial thoughts are how come the people closest to the person who committed suicide couldnt see what was in front of them.

This is a sad subject, but it happens hundreds of times daily somewhere around the world.

90 people a day commit suicide in Japan alone.

Today, too many people of all ages needlessly take their own lives. On average, almost 3000 people commit suicide every day.

Source :- hXXp://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2007/s16/en/index.html
 
I personally would of laughed as well, because I would of thought it was a joke. I would of felt terrible afterwards. You hear about how the bodybuilders were tryin to cover it all up, by changing all there user's posts and whatnot? I'm still confused as to why he chose a bodybuilder forum?
 
I see it like this, when your driving a car and you see a car crash. Some people look over,slow down and then keep going. Other people stop,call 911 and then go help the people. Then there are the few that stop pull over and watch whats happing and joke and carry on. I have seen this first hand many times.
Sometimes parents and friends are so busy in their own life's they don't pay attention whats going on with their loved ones. Other times the person that commits suicide doesn't seek or look for help and keeps his/her emotions hidden.
 
I don't know what to think. There is so much crazy sh*t around on the internet these days being desensitised to some poor sod topping themselves doesn't surprise me. Laughing at it afterwards is pretty f'n slack imo.

Given the poor sod in this case was suffering bi-polar it's not surprising his growing depression or whatever caused the suicide slipped past the keeper.

As for the body builder forum, he might have been a body builder himself.
 

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