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Rutgers Student Kills Self After Being taped

focadima

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Surprised this wasn't discused here today--It really really bothers me for some reason--People are just plain mean sometimes





PISCATAWAY, N.J. — The death of a Rutgers University freshman stirred outrage and remorse among classmates who said they wished they could have stopped the teen from jumping off a bridge after secret video of his sexual encounter with a man was streamed online.
Tyler Clementi, 18, jumped off the George Washington Bridge into the Hudson River last week. His body was identified Thursday after being found in the river a day before.
"Had he been in bed with a woman, this would not have happened," said Rutgers student Lauren Felton, 21, of Warren. "He wouldn't have been outed via an online broadcast, and his privacy would have been respected and he might still have his life."
Clementi was a violinist whose life revolved around music, said Ed Schmiedecke, the recently retired music director at Ridgewood High School, from which Clementi graduated this year.
"He was a terrific musician, and a very promising, hardworking young man," Schmiedecke said.
Clementi's roommate, Dharun Ravi, and fellow Rutgers freshman Molly Wei, both 18, have been charged with invading Clementi's privacy. Middlesex County prosecutors say that they used a webcam to surreptitiously transmit a live image of Clementi having sex Sept. 19 and that Ravi tried to webcast a second encounter on Sept. 21, the day before Clementi's suicide.
Collecting or viewing sexual images without consent is a fourth-degree crime, and transmitting them is a third-degree crime with a maximum prison term of five years. A lawyer for Ravi, of Plainsboro, did not immediately return a message seeking comment, and it was unclear whether Wei, of Princeton, had retained a lawyer.
A spokesman for the Middlesex County prosecutor's office didn't return messages inquiring whether there could be additional charges, and experts diverged on the potential for the pair to face more severe charges in light of Clementi's apparent suicide.
Parry Aftab, who runs the website WiredSafety, said it's possible the classmates could be prosecuted for violating Clementi's civil rights.
"If these kids could get away with one privacy law violation, that would be a sin," she said.
But former assistant Essex County prosecutor Luanne Peterpaul said such a prosecution was unlikely because the federal government doesn't recognize sexual orientation as a protected class.
Peterpaul, vice chairwoman of the gay rights group Garden State Equality, said prosecutors might be able to pursue the case as a hate crime if they could establish that the defendants were motivated to act because they perceived Clementi as gay. But that can be hard to prove, she said.
A lawyer for Clementi's family has not responded to requests for comment on whether Clementi was open about his sexual orientation.
ABC News and The Star-Ledger of Newark reported that Clementi left on his Facebook page on Sept. 22 a note that read: "Jumping off the gw bridge sorry." Later, his Facebook page was accessible only to friends.
Even if the young violinist from Ridgewood was not well known at his new school, his death stirred outrage.
"The notion that video of Tyler doing what he was doing can be considered a spectacle is just heinous," said Jordan Gochman, 19, of Jackson, who didn't know Clementi. "It's intolerant, it's upsetting, it makes it seem that being gay is something that is wrong and can be considered laughable."
For some of Clementi's new classmates, the first time they learned much about him was when they got word of his death.
"I guess the only person I haven't talked to is Tyler 'cause he's like really quiet and shy," said Justin Lee, a freshman from Princeton who lives on Clementi's hall.
Other students who did know Clement were upset that they didn't do more to help him. "I wish I could have been more of an ally," said Georges Richa, a freshman from neighboring New Brunswick.
About 100 people gathered Wednesday night for a vigil on campus. They lay on the ground and chanted slogans like, "We're here, we're ****, we're not going home."
Rutgers University President Richard McCormick wrote in a letter to the campus, "If the charges are true, these actions gravely violate the university's standards of decency and humanity."
Coincidentally, the university this week launched Project Civility, designed to get students thinking about how they treat others.
Gay rights groups say the suicide makes Clementi a national example of a problem they are increasingly working to combat: young people who kill themselves after being tormented over their sexuality.
On Tuesday, a 13-year-old California boy died nine days after classmates found him hanging from a tree. Authorities say other teens had taunted the boy, Seth Walsh of Tehachapi, for being gay.
Steven Goldstein, chairman of Garden State Equality, said in a statement that his group considers Clementi's death a hate crime.
"We are heartbroken over the tragic loss of a young man who, by all accounts, was brilliant, talented and kind," Goldstein said. "And we are sickened that anyone in our society, such as the students allegedly responsible for making the surreptitious video, might consider destroying others' lives as a sport."
In response to Clementi's death and other perceived instances of bullying or harassment, the group Parents, Families & Friends of Lesbians and **** said it planned to issue a "call to action" on the subject.
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I read about this yesterday and thought about posting it, but didn't because I truly believe that some jackasses here wouldn't understand the complete and utter horror of the crime that drove this kid to kill himself. That they would think it might be funny to post a roomate having sex live on the internet. That he should have just laughed it off instead of being hurt by what they did.
 
For such a high profile University--tisk tisk on those teens

really--I am at such a loss for words since early this AM when I heard it on the news.
If you dont like your roommate go talk to the residential advisor..
 
I know this Man--a friend of dh and his brothers ( really a good friend of his brothers)
was a victim of numerous hate ( against ****) Crimes in ELMHURST that led to him having to move and a deep depression, he ended up killing himself, he was in his early 30's..
 
I just read about this on AOL.....it makes me sick to think that someone took their life because someone felt the need to be an ****. And now this family is mourning their son. Terrible. It makes you remember how mean kids can be and how embarassment for a teen is about as bad as it gets at that age.
 
This kind of thing doesn't just happen, the kid who posted it probably has a history of being an ****. A lot of parents shield their kids from consequences or brush off their antics as boys will be boys. This is sad, but what is saddest is that the roommate probably doesn't see what he did was wrong.

As for gay bashing, my DH has been gay bashed and he is totally straight. We used to have an old school Apple computers decal on one of our cars, you know the apple in rainbow colors. There was more than once that people screamed ****got at my husband. It was just plain sad. Nothing makes me more stabby than people who act like that.
 
I heard about this on Fox News this afternoon. I can't understand how those other two teens could be so cruel. It is disgusting.
 
Your right, it was a girl and a boy. What where they thinking?
Obviously they weren't thinking about him as a human being with feelings, they just wanted a cheap laugh.

I hope they spend years behind bars & the rest of their lives haunted by what they did. But I doubt they are capable of any feelings of remorse or guilt.
 
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