Florida Teen Abraham Biggs Live-Streams His Suicide On Internet

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RASHA MADKOUR | November 21, 2008 09:51 PM EST | AP

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MIAMI — A college student committed suicide by taking a drug overdose in front of a live webcam as some computer users egged him on, others tried to talk him out of it, and another messaged OMG in horror when it became clear it was no joke. Some watchers contacted the Web site to notify police, but by the time officers entered Abraham Biggs' home _ a scene also captured on the Internet _ it was too late.

Biggs, a 19-year-old Broward College student who suffered from what his family said was bipolar disorder, or manic depression, lay dead on his bed in his father's Pembroke Pines house Wednesday afternoon, the camera still running 12 hours after Biggs announced his intentions online around 3 a.m.

It was unclear how many people watched it unfold.

Biggs was not the first person to commit suicide with a webcam rolling. But the drawn-out drama _ and the reaction of those watching _ was seen as an extreme example of young people's penchant for sharing intimate details about themselves over the Internet.

Biggs' family was infuriated that no one acted sooner to save him, neither the viewers nor the Web site that hosted the live video, Justin.tv. The Web site shows a video image, with a space alongside where computer users can instantly post comments.

Only when police arrived did the Web feed stop, "so that's 12 hours of watching," said the victim's sister, Rosalind Bigg. "They got hits, they got viewers, nothing happened for hours."

She added: "It didn't have to be."

An autopsy concluded Biggs died from a combination of opiates and benzodiazepine, which his family said was prescribed for his bipolar disorder.

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Biggs announced his plans to kill himself over a Web site for bodybuilders, authorities said. But some users told investigators they did not take him seriously because he had threatened suicide on the site before.

Some members of his virtual audience encouraged him to do it, others tried to talk him out of it, and some discussed whether he was taking a dose big enough to kill himself, said Wendy Crane, an investigator with the Broward County medical examiner's office.

A computer user who claimed to have watched said that after swallowing some pills, Biggs went to sleep and appeared to be breathing for a few hours while others cracked jokes.

Someone notified the moderator of the bodybuilding site, who traced Biggs' location and called police, Crane said.

As police entered the room, the audience's reaction was filled with Internet shorthand: "OMFG," one wrote, meaning "Oh, my God." Others, either not knowing what they were seeing, or not caring, wrote "lol," which means "laughing out loud," and "hahahah."

An online video purportedly from Biggs' webcam shows a gun-wielding officer entering a bedroom, where a man is lying on a bed, his face turned away from the camera. The officer begins to examine him, as the camera lens is covered. Authorities could not immediately verify the authenticity of the video, though it matched their description of what occurred.

Montana Miller, an assistant professor of popular culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, said Biggs' very public suicide was not shocking, given the way teenagers chronicle every facet of their lives on sites like Facebook and MySpace.

"If it's not recorded or documented then it doesn't even seem worthwhile," she said. "For today's generation it might seem, `What's the point of doing it if everyone isn't going to see it?'"

She likened Biggs' death to other public ways of committing suicide, like jumping off a bridge.

Crane said she knows of a case in which a Florida man shot himself in the head in front of an online audience, though she didn't know how much viewers saw. In Britain last year, a man hanged himself while chatting online.

In a statement, Justin.tv CEO Michael Seibel said: "We regret that this has occurred and want to respect the privacy of the broadcaster and his family during this time."

The Web site would not say how many people were watching the broadcast. The site as a whole had 672,000 unique visitors in October, according to Nielsen.

Miami lawyer William Hill said there is probably nothing that could be done legally to those who watched and did not act. As for whether the Web site could be held liable, Hill said there doesn't seem to be much of a case for negligence.

"There could conceivably be some liability if they knew this was happening and they had some ability to intervene and didn't take action," said Hill, who does business litigation and has represented a number of Internet-based clients. But "I think it would be a stretch."

Condolences poured into Biggs' MySpace page, where the mostly unsmiling teen is seen posing in a series of pictures with various young women. On the bodybuilding Web site, Biggs used the screen name CandyJunkie. His Justin.tv alias was "feels_like_ecstacy."

Rosalind Bigg described her brother as an outgoing person who struck up conversations with Starbucks baristas and enjoyed taking his young nieces to Chuck E. Cheese. He was health-conscious and exercised but was not a bodybuilder, she said.

"This is very, very sudden and unexpected for us," the sister said. "It boggles the mind. We don't understand."

___

Associated Press Writers Jessica Gresko and Lisa Orkin Emmanuel and the AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS sister's last name in next-to-last graf.)

MIAMI — A college student committed suicide by taking a drug overdose in front of a live webcam as some computer users egged him on, others tried to talk him out of it, and another messaged OMG ...
MIAMI — A college student committed suicide by taking a drug overdose in front of a live webcam as some computer users egged him on, others tried to talk him out of it, and another messaged OMG ...
 
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I signed up for the site to post my comment. I think the kid had serious problems and he should have recieived the help he needed. I find it hard to believe people on the internet could have done anything to help him. Most would have thought it was a hoax because 1. he did it before and 2. this stuff happens a lot. It's amazing how callous people can be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 11/29/2008

point of fact... teen suicide.
does it on the web shows disregard for his family, contempt for the rest of the world and deep self-hate.
Ok.
And, you gotta think, 15 mins. of fame.
Done and over.
Let it go .. it's not news ... it's tragedy for his family.
Not the rest of the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 11/25/2008

most people online will laugh and mock another person if they exhibit any sign of weakness ..its a cruel world..and people need to accept it.I feel bad that so many die thinking anyone online may have cared about them....the first thing people need to realize is when you're online..there is no one who truly cares...

whats worse is online you get to see the real character within people..and frankly..its usually pretty nasty.I don't recommend people look for a shoulder online..or a helping hand..its a delusion..
i recommend people just grow up and face reality.Ther'es no free lunches.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 PM on 11/24/2008
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I didn't see the video although I'm not surprised at the complacency of the viewing audience. We live in that kind of world. How many people would stop and help a crime victim? How many officials assist crime victims? It is almost as bad as the 70's when a dozen Brooklyn tenants of an apartment building watched for hours as a neighbor was brutally murdered and no one telephoned the police.

It is that kind of world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 11/24/2008
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Ugh I read about that in my bioethics class...i was so sickened by it and disgusted I hated knowing about it. Its just like that movie where a women was raped in broad day light on a busy sidewalk.ppl just walked right on by. ugh I remember a car crash happened right in front of me I was the 2nd person at an intersection waiting to turn left. A van coming the opposite way was ran off the road and jumped the curb spined and hit the median or concrete wall lining the freeway, hard. The car in front of me just turned left and got on the freeway as did all the ones behind me. I was the only one to stop and help and call 911.... i was like wtf.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 PM on 11/24/2008
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I coudn't watch this video and maybe shouldn't comment on it....but surely if it depicts this suicide it should be taken down. It's not entertainment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 11/24/2008

Unless you spend a significant amount of time participating in real-time Web communities, perhaps it isn't possible to understand how something like this can and does happen.

Online community moderators can tell you that just as in the real world, there are the genuinely ill, the attention-seekers, rude insensitive idiots and genuine caring people who try to help.

As a chat and forum moderator, I cannot begin to count the number of people I've come across who express suicidal thoughts. Most moderators go to extraordinary lengths to offer help, as do many others in a group.

But people who frequent chatrooms are not crisis counselors or skilled in dealing with emergencies. Compounding the problem is the real-time nature of these situations and the inability to find out where the person is located.

You soon learn not all of these people are for real. There are "attention-seekers," who use online forums to gain sympathy and attention they would not otherwise get. It's similar to the phenomena in which people develop phony online personalities and illnesses, sometimes known as "Munchausen by Internet."

The frequency with which this happens makes it impossible to guess who is and isn't in need of help. You use your best judgment and try to help who you can. The rude and insensitive among us may mock them, but doing it online isn't much different from the idiots who mock these people in real life, or on the playground.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 11/24/2008

elemsee, I understand your point, and the "attention-seeker" factor totally.
As a man in my 50's, you may call my views of this old-fashioned.
I lived in this world before "the internet highway", and online ever existed.
I saw it begin to play a part in our lives, in work and recreation.
I then watched it become a very big part of the lives of many,
especially the kids, and younger adults. Just like cell-phones.
And taking photos with them, and placing everything on YouTube.
Baby boomers saw a lot. Never expected this, or "24 hr. news",
which is made up of bits of news, but lots of "experts" paid for opinions.

But living your life has suffered. Replaced by bored people watching someone die,
for HOURS, and commenting under the watch of moderators, who also just watched.

When that "attention" includes threatening to take your life, either on a ledge, a bridge,
or on an online camera, witnesses have two choices. Help or move on. No narratives.
Maybe this sick kid thought, "I'll show them what I'm doing". If anyone at all cares, "I live".
If not, "I die". Well. Now, he got his answer. 'Cause he's dead.

My dad had it right, years ago. He created buildings. Built some beautiful structures.

He said "Everyone walks right by as it's going up".
"When it's burning down, Then, they will stop and watch".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 11/24/2008

It really does take a village to raise a child -- Many simple minds want to blame the family or lack of parenting for everything, even in a culture so complex and mentally and emotionally invasive and persuasive as ours. There are many influences stronger and with more access than the family. Many times the family is trying, but losing. The internet community is one type of village, the key is the villagers have to care and there has to be someone with leadership skills and the the will to act in the village. Had this been a hoax, it still calls for some kind of intervention because doing this as a hoax is as much an act of a sick mind as is the suicide.

I hope this young man has found the peace that eluded him in his short life.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 11/24/2008

This will be a Law and Order episode soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 AM on 11/24/2008

online audience reaction not surprising in a culture that allows 1.4 million abortions a year. No respect at begginnning of life devalues life altogether. A shame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 AM on 11/24/2008

You are joking, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 AM on 11/24/2008

You are truly sick. Look at the massacre of innocent people in Darfur and all across Africa. Look at the thousands of children who are orphans because of religious zealots lying to natives about condoms so they will not use them. And you say that legal,. safe abortions are the problem in this world?

It is the religious who devalue life by making a pile of cells more important than a living person. I will bet that most, if not all the people who watched this poor boy and did nothing to help went to church afterwards.

You are such a hypocrate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 11/24/2008

Your anti-choice soapbox is entirely out of place. A depressed teen takes his life, and you want to somehow relate this to the termination of unwanted pregnancies? Strange person!

Abortion has nothing to do with what you imagine is a lack of respect for life. That you care more about a clump of cells that has merely the possibility to one day become a human being than you do the livelihood of actual human beings speaks volumes. That you would take a private choice from women and give it to the government speaks volumes. It is you that lacks respect. Shame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 11/24/2008

Most parents use DVDs, video games, and the internet as substitutes for parenting. Kids are not engaged with people like they used to be and now we have a virtual "Lord of the Flies" happening in cyberspace. Kids (young adults in this instance) have to be taught empathy and responsibility today. Now I would never expect 19 year olds to have the same amount of common sense and sensitivity as an older adult, but I think the technologies or substitutes that I mentioned have really arrested the development of younger people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 11/24/2008

I don't think that's the problem. Proper treatment may have helped, but even that isn't a guarantee and it sounds like he was being treated. This is a serious disease and I don't think Internet use exacerbated it -- it just made people notice and probably burned a very disturbing image and memory into the minds of those watching who may have thought it was all a stunt. I feel sorry for everyone involved.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 AM on 11/24/2008
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R.I.P. Mr Biggs.

Having friends and relatives who suffer from Bi Polar Disorder, I find this so disturbing. It is a daily struggle for some of these people, even the ones who are medicated by the "professionals". I can't help but think that this could have been my nephew or my neighbor.

Some suicide attempts are for real while others are a cry for help. I can't help but wonder if by doing this in such a public manner, Mr Biggs was crying out for help, assuming someone watching would raise the alarm and he would be rescued.

He should have known better than to rely on the goodness of strangers, which is a vanishing trait in today's world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 PM on 11/23/2008

My prayers go out to this young mans family? This is truely a tragedy that is going to take some time to get over. We live in a cold calused world who overlook many times the horrific drama that is unfolding
in the lives of family, friends and associates because it seems like to much trouble at the time.

The only time many of us are moved to compassion is when it is our spouse,parents or children or
mayby a relative if we like them.

We have to melt the iceburgs that have formed in our hearts and open it up to inclued everyone.
Then and only then can we begin to see the disturbing pictures that are playing itself out all around the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 11/23/2008
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Our sick society. Sad. so very sad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:39 PM on 11/23/2008

It did not much matter if you posted "Is this for real", nor
if you posted an "OMG", or posted a "LOL".........
What matters is that he did this online, and it was viewed by many, many,
people who watched this during their own bored existences for the entertainment
value of the day, posted responses to it, and chose to continue watching,
while doing nothing else. F******G totally uncaring IGNORANCE.

That goes for the moderators on that sight, the MOST.
They are moderators, know what's posted, delete certain remarks,
and are well aware of the attention it is drawing. Still, they notified not one
authority that could really help this kid. It was just "the story of the day".

Ever hear the song "Small Circle Of Friends", by Phil Oakes?
Check it out, maybe on Youtube. That says it all............

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 11/23/2008

Correction, sorry......
the song Is "{Outside Of A} Small Circle Of Friends" by Phil Ochs.
Spelled his last name wrong. Anyway, you can hear the song on YouTube.
Really says it ALL.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 11/23/2008

I read the majority of the thread in which this whole situation occurred (the thread has since been hidden from public viewing) and I would like to point out that although the majority of the commentating community either laughed or shrugged it off, there were a significant number of people who urged anyone to call the police.
I should point out that only one moderator was online during the course of the event, and she had logged off within 15 minutes without full knowledge of the situation. The next moderator did not log on until approximately 5 hours after the situation was over.
One user in particular was very concerned, but was unable to contact the police because he was in India. He even looked up and posted the contact information for the local police district. No one paid him any heed until about an hour later. By this time, Abraham Briggs (aka CandyJunkie) had not been breathing for about 9 hours. Finally, about 12 and a half hours after he OD'd, the police found his body.
The first comment after this occured was "OMG, It was REAL, the police are there!"

So yes, there are many people who deserve to be pointed out for not doing anything. But realize, there was a large percentage of people who were equally horrified at what they were watching as we are now reading about it and tried to do something about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 PM on 11/24/2008
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You know, I don't care if these people who were watching the video thought it was a joke. The point is, suicide is NOT funny. I don't care if someone is pretending or not. Those watching should have called 911 immediately from the beginning.

I find that people who were laughing throughout really disturbing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 11/23/2008

If you were watching... would you immediately think it were real?
Would u have called 5 mins later? Really?
Remember this is online ... not FOX cable.(where we know EVERYTHING is true.)
Hypocrite?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 11/25/2008
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