eWoss Home
  
Make eWoss Your Homepage
eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

National News

Hoax witness: Neighbor hoped to 'mess with Megan'

Friday, November 21, 2008 4:41:18 PM
By GREG RISLING

 This Sept. 4, 2008 file photo shows Lori Drew, a Missouri woman who allegedly perpetrated a MySpace hoax that drove her daughter's 13-year-old classmate to suicide, leaves court in Los Angeles. The case of U.S. vs. Lori Drew is viewed in legal circles as landmark Internet law, but as outlined in government documents with its neighborhood feuds and a teen's suicide it reads more like a plot line for a made-for-TV drama.  (AP Photo/Nick Ut)LOS ANGELES (AP) - A friend of the Missouri woman accused of sending cruel Internet messages to teenage neighbor Megan Meier, who later committed suicide, testified Friday that the defendant told her she had concocted a false online identity "to mess with Megan."

Prosecutors say Lori Drew, 49; her daughter, 13-year-old Sarah; and her business assistant created a MySpace alias of a teen boy called "Josh Evans" in September 2006 to befriend Megan to find out whether she was spreading rumors about Sarah.

Drew has pleaded not guilty to one count of conspiracy and three counts of accessing computers without authorization. Each count carries a potential sentence of five years in prison. Defense attorney Dean Steward has reminded jurors that Drew was not facing charges dealing with the suicide.

Megan, who was being treated for depression and attention deficit disorder, committed suicide after receiving a final message saying the world would be better off if she was dead.

The case is believed to be the nation's first cyber-bullying trial. Its results could set a legal precedent for dealing with the issue of online harassment.

The defendant's friend Michelle Mulford, whose daughter Jessica was friends with Sarah, said Drew told her that she had asked Sarah and the assistant, Ashley Grills, to delete the MySpace account after learning Megan had killed herself. The testimony corroborates Grills' account that Drew told her and Sarah to get rid of the account.

Mulford said Drew told her that she panicked after hearing about the suicide. Mulford said she asked Drew why they had come up with the MySpace account, and Drew replied, "'To mess with Megan.'"

Grills, 20, testified Thursday that Drew knew Megan was suicidal when the messages were sent. She also told jurors she helped Drew set up the fake MySpace profile to lure Megan into an online relationship.

Testifying for the prosecution under a grant of immunity, Grills said she sent the last message from "Josh Evans" to Megan in October 2006 on the day the girl hanged herself.

When she learned of Megan's death, Grills said Drew told her, "'We could have pushed her overboard because she was suicidal and depressed.'"

Grills, who helped Drew with her coupon magazine business, testified that she previously told Drew they might get in trouble for the scheme but that Drew replied it was fine, "'and people do it all the time.'"

FBI agent Justin Kempf testified that files had been deleted from Drew's computer on the day Megan committed suicide, but the content of the files remained unclear.

A MySpace executive also testified Friday that MySpace requires users to agree to service terms that prohibit harassment and inappropriate content.

Jae Sung, a vice president of customer care at MySpace, said the popular site requires users to check a box agreeing to the rules as part of its effort to create an environment where users feel safe.

"We need to create some of these rules to ensure that," he said.

Sung's testimony addressed a central aspect of the prosecution case alleging that Drew violated MySpace service terms by harassing Megan and setting up a fake account. Sung said "impostor profiles" such as the "Josh" account in this case are not allowed under MySpace guidelines.

"What happens when they are found?" Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Krause asked.

"We generally delete those profiles," Sung said.

Sung said MySpace now has 400 million profiles for users, which makes it difficult to enforce the service rules.


Other National News

Panel poised to back Blagojevich impeachment vote 12:20PM CT
Prosecutors: Madoff was ready to send out $173M 12:17PM CT
Civil rights-era lawyer for Bond, Ali dies in Fla. 12:12PM CT
Teen charged with 4 killings in Rochester, NY 11:37AM CT
Ala. cop accused in fake disappearance going home 11:33AM CT
Former Sen. Larry Craig dropping further appeals 11:18AM CT
NY court papers may solve Gotti mystery 11:14AM CT
Ga., Minn. part of national salmonella outbreak 11:10AM CT
Missouri Sen. Kit Bond won't seek re-election 11:05AM CT
Union soldier's bones found at Md. Civil War site 10:51AM CT

  

© 2004-2007 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.