MySpace Cruel Prank Leads To Teen’s Suicide
A cruel and unbelievably vicious prank perpetrated upon a young girl has stripped away the Leave To Beaver veneer of a suburban St. Louis neighborhood. A fourteen year old girl is dead by her own hand, her parents shattered and in disbelief. There will never be justice for their precious daughter.
Will there be justice for Megan Meier?
UPDATE: MySpace Suicide Reaction: Outrage! Outrage! Outrage!
My Space’ hoax ends with suicide of Dardenne Prairie teen
By Steve Pokin
Monday, November 12, 2007 5:48 AM CST
His name was Josh Evans. He was 16 years old. And he was hot.
“Mom! Mom! Mom! Look at him!” Tina Meier recalls her daughter saying.
Josh had contacted Megan Meier through her MySpace page and wanted to be added as a friend.Yes, he’s cute, Tina Meier told her daughter. “Do you know who he is?”
“No, but look at him! He’s hot! Please, please, can I add him?”
Mom said yes. And for six weeks Megan and Josh – under Tina’s watchful eye – became acquainted in the virtual world of MySpace.
Josh said he was born in Florida and recently had moved to O’Fallon. He was homeschooled. He played the guitar and drums.
He was from a broken home: “when i was 7 my dad left me and my mom and my older brother and my newborn brother 3 boys god i know poor mom yeah she had such a hard time when we were younger finding work to pay for us after he loeft.”
As for 13-year-old Megan, of Dardenne Prairie, this is how she expressed who she was:
M is for Modern
E is for Enthusiastic
G is for Goofy
A is for Alluring
N is for Neglected.
She loved swimming, boating, fishing, dogs, rap music and boys. But her life had not always been easy, her mother says.
She was heavy and for years had tried to lose weight. She had attention deficit disorder and battled depression. Back in third grade she had talked about suicide, Tina says, and ever since had seen a therapist.
But things were going exceptionally well. She had shed 20 pounds, getting down to 175. She was 5 foot 5½ inches tall.
She had just started eighth grade at a new school, Immaculate Conception, in Dardenne Prairie, where she was on the volleyball team. She had attended Fort Zumwalt public schools before that.
Amid all these positives, Tina says, her daughter decided to end a friendship with a girlfriend who lived down the street from them. The girls had spent much of seventh grade alternating between being friends and, the next day, not being friends, Tina says.
Part of the reason for Megan’s rosy outlook was Josh, Tina says. After school, Megan would rush to the computer.
“Megan had a lifelong struggle with weight and self-esteem,” Tina says. “And now she finally had a boy who she thought really thought she was pretty.”
It did seem odd, Tina says, that Josh never asked for Megan’s phone number. And when Megan asked for his, she says, Josh said he didn’t have a cell and his mother did not yet have a landline.
And then on Sunday, Oct. 15, 2006, Megan received a puzzling and disturbing message from Josh. Tina recalls that it said: “I don’t know if I want to be friends with you anymore because I’ve heard that you are not very nice to your friends.”
Frantic, Megan shot back: “What are you talking about?”
SHADOWY CYBERSPACE
Tina Meier was wary of the cyber-world of MySpace and its 70 million users. People are not always who they say they are.
Tina knew firsthand. Megan and the girl down the block, the former friend, once had created a fake MySpace account, using the photo of a good-looking girl as a way to talk to boys online, Tina says. When Tina found out, she ended Megan’s access.
MySpace has rules. A lot of them. There are nine pages of terms and conditions. The long list of prohibited content includes sexual material. And users must be at least 14.
“Are you joking?” Tina asks. “There are fifth-grade girls who have MySpace accounts.”
As for sexual content, Tina says, most parents have no clue how much there is. And Megan wasn’t 14 when she opened her account. To join, you are asked your age but there is no check. The accounts are free.
As Megan’s 14th birthday approached, she pleaded for her mom to give her another chance on MySpace, and Tina relented.
She told Megan she would be all over this account, monitoring it. Megan didn’t always make good choices because of her ADD, Tina says. And this time, Megan’s page would be set to private and only Mom and Dad would have the password.
‘GOD-AWFUL FEELING’
Monday, Oct. 16, 2006, was a rainy, bleak day. At school, Megan had handed out invitations to her upcoming birthday party and when she got home she asked her mother to log on to MySpace to see if Josh had responded.
Why did he suddenly think she was mean? Who had he been talking to?
Tina signed on. But she was in a hurry. She had to take her younger daughter, Allison, to the orthodontist.
Before Tina could get out the door it was clear Megan was upset. Josh still was sending troubling messages. And he apparently had shared some of Megan’s messages with others.
Tina recalled telling Megan to sign off.
“I will Mom,” Megan said. “Let me finish up.”
Tina was pressed for time. She had to go. But once at the orthodontist’s office she called Megan: Did you sign off?
“No, Mom. They are all being so mean to me.”
“You are not listening to me, Megan! Sign off, now!”
Fifteen minutes later, Megan called her mother. By now Megan was in tears.
“They are posting bulletins about me.” A bulletin is like a survey. “Megan Meier is a slut. Megan Meier is fat.”
Megan was sobbing hysterically. Tina was furious that she had not signed off.
Once Tina returned home she rushed into the basement where the computer was. Tina was shocked at the vulgar language her daughter was firing back at people.
“I am so aggravated at you for doing this!” she told Megan.
Megan ran from the computer and left, but not without first telling Tina, “You’re supposed to be my mom! You’re supposed to be on my side!”
On the stairway leading to her second-story bedroom, Megan ran into her father, Ron.
“I grabbed her as she tried to go by,” Ron says. “She told me that some kids were saying horrible stuff about her and she didn’t understand why. I told her it’s OK. I told her that they obviously don’t know her. And that it would be fine.”
Megan went to her room and Ron went downstairs to the kitchen, where he and Tina talked about what had happened, the MySpace account, and made dinner.
Twenty minutes later, Tina suddenly froze in mid-sentence.
“I had this God-awful feeling and I ran up into her room and she had hung herself in the closet.”
Megan Taylor Meier died the next day, three weeks before her 14th birthday.
Later that day, Ron opened his daughter’s MySpace account and viewed what he believes to be the final message Megan saw – one the FBI would be unable to retrieve from the hard drive.
It was from Josh and, according to Ron’s best recollection, it said, “Everybody in O’Fallon knows how you are. You are a bad person and everybody hates you. Have a shitty rest of your life. The world would be a better place without you.”
BEYOND GRIEF INTO FURY
Tina and Ron saw a grief counselor. Tina went to a couple of Parents After Loss of Suicide meetings, as well.
They tried to message Josh Evans, to let him know the deadly power of mean words. But his MySpace account had been deleted.
The day after Megan’s death, they went down the street to comfort the family of the girl who had once been Megan’s friend. They let the girl and her family know that although she and Megan had their ups and down, Megan valued her friendship.
They also attended the girl’s birthday party, although Ron had to leave when it came time to sing “Happy Birthday.” The Meiers went to the father’s 50th birthday celebration. In addition, the Meiers stored a foosball table, a Christmas gift, for that family.
Six weeks after Megan died, on a Saturday morning, a neighbor down the street, a different neighbor, one they didn’t know well, called and insisted that they meet that morning at a counselor’s office in northern O’Fallon.
The woman would not provide details. Ron and Tina went. Their grief counselor was there. As well as a counselor from Fort Zumwalt West Middle School.
The neighbor from down the street, a single mom with a daughter the same age as Megan, informed the Meiers that Josh Evans never existed.
She told the Meiers that Josh Evans was created by adults, a family on their block. These adults, she told the Meiers, were the parents of Megan’s former girlfriend, the one with whom she had a falling out. These were the people who’d asked the Meiers to store their foosball table.
The single mother, for this story, requested that her name not be used. She said her daughter, who had carpooled with the family that was involved in creating the phony MySpace account, had the password to the Josh Evans account and had sent one message – the one Megan received (and later retrieved off the hard drive) the night before she took her life.
“She had been encouraged to join in the joke,” the single mother said.
The single mother said her daughter feels the guilt of not saying something sooner and for writing that message. Her daughter didn’t speak out sooner because she’d known the other family for years and thought that what they were doing must be OK because, after all, they were trusted adults.
On the night the ambulance came for Megan, the single mother said, before it left the Meiers’ house her daughter received a call. It was the woman behind the creation of the Josh Evans account. She had called to tell the girl that something had happened to Megan and advised the girl not to mention the MySpace account.
Source: Suburban Journals – ‘My Space’ hoax ends with suicide of Dardenne Prairie teen
The story continues to a sad end for Megan’s family. There were no winners in this story; there’s not much that even the most optimistic could glean from this tale. Just a cruel prank by some vicious, thoughtless parents.
After further meditation: they weren’t thoughtless. They put plenty of thought into their hoax: a lot of mean, despicable, dirty thought.
It’s hard to see how after arranging such a cruel hoax with such tragic consequences, those parents could instruct their children on any moral or ethical issues that the children might have to deal with later.
It’s just a sad story.
Our hearts go out to the parents and family of Megan.
By Little Baby Ginn
[photo:chatinthehat]
notes: Mondoreb
More Megan Meier MySpace Suicide Stories:
All stories listed on ticker in upper left-hand corner of page.
LATEST:
Megan Meier MySpace Suicide: Reactions to the Reactions to the Reactions
Supposedly an ex-friend of Megan’s replies to our stories in
“Megan Had It Coming”
MySpace Suicide: The Megan Meier Story – Video
Megan Meier MySpace Suicide Cruel Hoax: No Justice for Megan”
Cruel Hoaxer’s Outed: Let the Lesser Outrage Begin
Megan Meier MySpace Suicide Reactions: Outrage! Outrage!
MySpace Suicide: Megan Meier’s Story May Prevent Others Like It
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Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.
Originally posted at DBKP at Blogger.







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My heart goes out to Megan’s family. There are no words to express the grief that this experience has no doubt caused her mother and father. I have a 13 year old son who frequents myspace and I will share this story with him. Megan, May Your Lovely Soul Rest in Peace…
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I think what that girls mother is the lowest person ever! I am a 14 year old and have a Myspace. My thoughts and prayers go out to Megans family. I hope that she gets justice for the things that that woman did.
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i lol’d
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im sorry for the mom, both of them, but honestly, if you’re that weak minded to commit suicide over comments from someone you dont even REALLY know then you probably shoudnt have been born in the first place. natural selection, that’s all. cyberbullies… come on. if there is someone picking on you IN THE REAL WORLD i get it, you have a reason to be upset, but to care for what people post in myspace… myspace is lame and so are its users.
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Nikki Reply:
May 28th, 2009 at 20:29
Fuck you, MySpace Hater. If there is such a thing as natural selction, then why are you, a selfish, egotistical, idiotic, brainless, spineless asshole, still here? You don’t know WHAT this girl was going through. Maybe a truck will run you over. That would be a beautiful irony.
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pikaPOWER Reply:
May 29th, 2009 at 14:07
wow, thats rude O: maybe you should friggin’ understand what’s going on with her, gosh “/
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softballbabe19995 Reply:
May 10th, 2010 at 09:57
i wish her parents the very best and i hope that the parents of this other teen get serious consequences, i know that wahtever i say isnt going to bring bach there daughter but i hope that it helps the family. i hope those people burn in hedoublehockeysticks for the rest of there lives, i belive in karma waht goes around come around and one day the parents are going to get whats coming to them.
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My heart goes out to this family, and may Megans soul rest in peace.
But the truth of the matter is, Myspace is just a website where a bunch of idiots can
gather together, and talk about who wore wat, and whos hot and whos not, SO HOT.
The point is to make as many people feel like shit in order to make yourself feel
BETTER, and obviously it works. I wonder what that family who did this to a little girl
can feel, some sense of pride to know that their the most f***** up people to ever
belong to live, if your over the age of 25 chances are you shuldnt be even
thinkin about myspace, much less how your gonna make some13 yr old girl feel
like shit because your daughters got into a little fight that prolly wouldve lasted for
another week or so. But thats arrogant, selfish people for ya. the world will never
see enough of em, and that little girls family will always have to live with that pain
and the grief of losing their only daughter to a bunch of cruel human beings trying
to make themselves feel better by having a 13 yr old girl harrased by an imaginary
MADEUP MYSPACE CHARACTER leading to her killin herself in her closet. If your
over the age of 25 and are harrasing ANYONE and making FAKE MYSPACES or
EVEN HAPPEN TO HAVE ONE. you should consider killin YOURSELF RIGHT NOW
before another 13 yr old KID commits suicide because of your DUMBASSES!!!
Thatd be doing us all a huge f***** favor.THANKS (:
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That is an extremely upsetting story. Whoever’s parent those were who were writing a 13 year old girl as a joke are a joke and i can honestly say they deserve to burn in hell, that girls life is in there hands and hearts and they will have to live with knowing they caused a young girl to kill themselves, but they deserve much fucking worse.
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i think dat was un necessary 4 the gurls 2 make that fake myspace idc if u weren’t friends anymore thats a low mean selfish thang 2 do.
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pikaPOWER Reply:
May 29th, 2009 at 14:08
amen! XD
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wow, thats crazy. i feel sorry for the Meier family “/ but those people who did that to poor Megan, is seriously rude >o<
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If we cant trust adults in this world. who can we trust?
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