Woman Guilty of Coercing Boyfriend to Kill Himself by Text Could Get Light Sentence
A family member of a Massachusetts teen who took his own life
after being coerced via text messages from his girlfriend wants the woman to
spend decades behind bars.
Michelle Carter, 20, could be sentenced on Thursday to little
or no prison time for her role in the July 2014 suicide of 18-year-old Conrad
Roy III. She was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in June.
Carter faces up to 20 years in prison after prosecutors successfully
painted the then 17-year-old as an attention-hungry teen, who craved playing
the role of the grief-stricken girlfriend.
"I don’t believe she can be helped. I don’t believe she
could even give one single f--- about what she’s done," Roy's aunt Kim Bozzi
wrote in a statement to Bristol County Juvenile Court Judge Lawrence Moniz.
"I believe she should be kept far away from society. No Disney trips,
graduations or proms she can bask in. Take away the spotlight that she so
desperately craves. Twenty years may seem extreme but it is still twenty more
than Conrad will ever have."
During the hearing, Roy's family spoke through tears,
explaining how Carter's actions had impacted each of them, as they spoke before
Moniz.
"Michelle Carter exploited my son's weakness and used
him as a pawn ... the fact that my son was convinced to kill himself makes the
pain harder. Where was her humanity? In what world was this behavior
acceptable?" Conrad Roy Jr., Roy's father, told a packed courtroom on
Thursday. He said Carter showed no remorse.
Prosecutors asked Moniz to sentence Carter to 7 to 12 years
in prison. The defense asked for probation.
Experts say a host of mitigating factors, including a lack of
specific Massachusetts laws, could work in Carter's favor as Moniz decides what
punishment fits the unusual crime.
The case hinged on a slew of chilling text messages, in which
Carter encouraged Roy to end his life — often chastising him when he hesitated
— and others she sent to classmates ahead of Roy’s suicide.
"When are you gonna do it? Stop ignoring the
question????" Carter wrote in one text to Roy of his suicide.
In another, when Roy seemed to pause about taking his life,
she wrote, "You're so hesitant because you keep over thinking it and keep
pushing it off. You just need to do it, Conrad. The more you push it off, the
more it will eat at you. You're ready and prepared."
Bozzi called this Carter's "sick plan." She said
texts to Roy's mother and sister and postings to social media after his death
was "very, very sick." She disputed the defense's reasoning that Roy
was inevitably going to kill himself with or without Carter's encouragement.
"Although he battled depression he was working towards
getting through it. There was light at the end of the tunnel but she snuffed it
out. I believe with my whole heart that he’d still be with us today if it
weren’t for her," Bozzi wrote.
The defense has not publicly stated whether or not Carter
will appeal the decision, but Nancy Gertner, a retired federal judge, said
Moniz could potentially avoid the appeal entirely with a lenient sentence.
“Whether she appeals will depend on what she gets. She could
get probation to 20 years. Manslaughter across the country is a unique kind of
crime. … My idea would be if she doesn’t get any time, she wouldn’t appeal,”
Gertner said.
Attorney Joseph P. Cataldo, who is representing Carter,
declined to comment on the sentencing or possibility of an appeal.
During his ruling, Moniz said that when Carter instructed Roy
to return to his vehicle on the night he used a water pump to fill his black
Ford F-250 with carbon monoxide, she became responsible because she knew he was
entering "a toxic environment inconsistent with human life."
Carter was 30 miles away at the time of the suicide and did
not physically force Roy to follow through with the suicide, the defense team
argued during the trial.
Cataldo said during the trial that Carter was a troubled teen
who was on Celexa, a treatment for depression, which can trigger side effects
like irrational thinking, irritability and poor impulse control.
Carter's father also asked that Moniz go easy on his
daughter, saying the medication made her unable to distinguish right from
wrong. He added that she struggled with eating disorders and the loss of three
grandparents over a three-year span.
"I pray to God you will take into consideration that
Michelle was a troubled, vulnerable teenager in an extremely difficult
situation and made a tragic mistake," David Carter wrote in a character
statement to Moniz. "I am 100% sure she was only trying to do what in her
mind what was right for Conrad."
He asked that she be granted counselling and probation.
"She will live forever with what she has done and I know
will be a better person because of it," David Carter wrote.
Because Roy and Carter were teens at the time of Roy's death,
another added layer of irrational thinking is in play, Gertner said.
"There's a substantial body of neuroscience that talks
about the judgment of 17- and 18-year-olds, that suggests that whoever they are
at this point is very different than who they are later on," Gertner said.
Despite her own mental health struggles, Moniz said Carter
had a responsibility to take action to stop a life-threatening risk.
Gertner said Moniz’s ruling is interesting because he
determined Carter should have intervened knowing that Roy was in the process of
suicide.
“The judge found she should have intervened, and that’s also
an unusual finding. What people don’t realize is, we don’t require people to
intervene during a crime,” Gertner said. “In Massachusetts … you have no legal
obligation to intervene.”
She added that Carter’s case opens up a host of questions
about the legality of assisted suicide, for which there is no statute in the
state of Massachusetts.
“Assisted suicide is someone who assisted, it’s never just
words. In this situation, the young man set up the carbon monoxide, he bought
the materials,” Gertner said. “Words, usually just words, are not sufficient
[to prove manslaughter].”
Following the verdict in June, the American Civil Liberties
Union of Massachusetts denounced Moniz’s decision in a statement released
shortly after the verdict.
"This conviction exceeds the limits of our criminal laws
and violates free speech protections guaranteed by the Massachusetts and U.S.
Constitutions," Matthew Segal, legal director at the ACLU of
Massachusetts, said. "If allowed to stand, Ms. Carter’s conviction could
chill important and worthwhile end-of-life discussions between loved ones
across the Commonwealth."
But Gertner said the First Amendment implications are
complex, and speech in the United States is not protected in all situations.
Carter had a bench trial, meaning Moniz heard the case and
decided whether or not Carter was guilty — not a jury. Gertner said that the
decision to have a bench trial was an opportunity for the defense to avoid a
jury being swayed by emotion, but judges can also be subjected to the
emotionality of a case, not just the letter of the law.
“I was a judge for 17 years, and an emotional element always
plays a role,” she said. “So you wonder if the starkness of the things she said
in the midst of the suicide moved the judge. [The defense] wanted to minimize
[the emotion] by having a judge trial, but judges are human beings.”
Because the decision of both guilt and punishment ultimately
falls on Moniz’s shoulders, Gertner reasoned that the judge could have decided
he would find Carter guilty of a crime but not punish her harshly due to the
unusual circumstances.
“I don’t know this judge at all, but it’s like cutting the
baby in half,” Gertner said. “You did something wrong, but on the other hand I
understand you were a troubled teen yourself and this is going to scar you for
the rest of your life. We don’t anticipate [Carter] will do this again, and the
sentence will predict that.”
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