kmov.com Web  




St. Louis Area News

Comments | Recommended

Prosecutor: Law doesn't allow for charges in MySpace suicide case

06:17 AM CST on Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Watch News 4 coverage

Family reaction

Previous story: Prosecutors take second look at suicide involving 13-year-old

  ST. CHARLES, Mo. (AP/KMOV) -- No criminal charges will be filed against people who sent cruel Internet messages to a 13-year-old girl before she committed suicide, the St. Charles County prosecutor said Monday.

Monday evening St. Charles County officials introduced a new internet harassment bill shortly after the prosecutor's announcement.

Two weeks ago the city of Dardenne Prarie passed an internet harassment law, and now St. Charles officials are trying to pass the same law that would cover the entire county.

A vote for the new law could come as early as two weeks.

The parents of Megan Meier of Dardenne Prairie, who hanged herself last year, said her suicide came minutes after she received mean messages through the social networking site MySpace.

  County prosecutor Jack Banas said at a news conference there was no applicable statute to file charges in the case. Banas said he looked at laws related to stalking, harassment and child endangerment, but found no repeated incidents of threats to someone's life or health, and no organized conspiracy.

  A police report said that a mother from the neighborhood and her 18-year-old employee fabricated a profile for a teenage boy online who pretended to be interested in Megan before he began bullying her. The police report indicates others gained access to the profile, and it is not clear who was sending Meier messages just before her death.

KMOV

Megan Meier

  Banas said based on additional interviews, the fake MySpace page was not created by the mother of one of Megan's friends. He said the page was created by the 18-year-old employee, though the mother and her 13-year-old daughter knew about the page. He said he was unable to speak directly with the 18-year-old, whom he said has been hospitalized for psychiatric treatment.

  After the case became public, Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt asked lawmakers to review state law to see if changes were necessary to better deal with cases that involve Internet bullying. Some municipalities have also considered or passed statutes to strengthen laws that deal with Internet harassment.

  (Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

Advertisement

Interactive

Sound off: Discuss this story

Stay in touch: Free Breaking News e-mails

Watch this: KMOV.com video archive

Slideshows: Photo galleries

Contact KMOV: By e-mail or phone

News tip? Call (314) 444-6333 or e-mail tips@kmov.com

Popular Stories