19/07/2023

Michelle Carter was convicted and sentenced to 15 months in jail for a “campaign of coercion” on her suicidal boyfriend.

Michelle Carter, the Massachusetts woman convicted of involuntary manslaughter after encouraging her boyfriend to kill himself through text messages and phone calls, will not have her day at the Supreme Court.
On Monday, the justices denied Carters petition to review her 2017 case. They did not offer an explanation of their denial, which will leave her conviction intact.
Carters attorneys argued that her case, which drew worldwide media attention, violated her First Amendment rights to free speech. Convicting Carter for her words alone, as her lawyers put it, is both novel and deeply confusing, because the Massachusetts courts didnt explain how to determine if and when somebodys comments become criminal.
Can a single statement be sufficiently coercive to constitute wanton and reckless conduct under Massachusetts law? Carters petition to the Supreme Court asks. Can a series of subtle hints suffice for criminal liability? When do words cross the line from permissible, encouragement, advice, or persuasion to prohibited coercion?
In 2014, when Carter was 17, she started what the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has called a systematic campaign of coercion to convince Conrad Roy III to kill himself. Roy, 18, had a history of suicide attempts and struggles with mental health, court records show. Carter, who struggled with an eating disorder, soothed Roys fears about dying, cajoled him for not following through on his plans to kill himself, and texted him messages like, You just [have] to do it, according to Carters petition to the Supreme Court.
Hang yourself, jump off a building, stab yourself. I dont know, she once wrote Roy, according to the Boston Globe. Theres lots of ways.
In July 2014, Roy parked his truck and started filling the cabin with carbon monoxide. At some point during the night, Roy called Carter, who was miles away, for a conversation that lasted more than 40 minutes. Carter later called Roy back, and they talked for another 40-plus minutes.
Ultimately, Roy asphyxiated to death. Later, Carter told a friend that shed been on the phone with Roy when he died and, at one point during their call, hed gotten out of the truck.
He got scared and I fucking told him to get back in, Carter wrote her friend, according to court documents.
She did not call the police or Mr. Roys family, Judge Lawrence Moniz, a juvenile court judge in Massachusetts, told the courtroom at Carters conviction, the Boston Globe reported. She called no one. And finally, she did not issue a simple additional instruction: Get out of the truck.
Carter was sentenced to 15 months in jail and started serving her sentence in February 2019. Her request for parole was denied in September.
Cover: This Feb. 11, 2019, booking photo released by the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office shows Michelle Carter. (Bristol County Sheriff’s Office via AP, File)