On June 16, 20-year-old Michelle Carter was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter for sending hundreds of texts encouraging her boyfriend to kill himself.
The young woman found guilty of sending hundreds of texts telling her boyfriend to kill himself has been sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison.
On June 16, a Massachusetts judge concluded that 20-year-old Michelle Carter was guilty of involuntary manslaughter for encouraging her boyfriend Conrad Roy III to kill himself when they were both were 17.
On Thursday, Judge Lawrence Moniz sentenced Carter to two-and-a-half years at the Bristol House of Correction, , with only 15 months of that sentence to be served behind bars. Terms of her probation include never profiting from the experience with paid books or interviews, not leaving her home state without permission, and never contacting Roy's family again.
"I have not found that Ms. Carter's age or level of maturity or even her mental illness have any significant impact on her actions," Moniz said at Carter's sentencing. He added that the court needed to strike a balance between punishing Carter for her actions and rehabilitation. She was facing a maximum of 20 years in prison.
After meeting in 2012 while both were on family vacations in Florida, Carter and Roy started exchanging a string of text messages that went on for almost two years. When Roy started telling Carter that he was thinking of committing suicide, Carter responded by telling him his family "would get over it" and giving him suggestions on how he could do it.
On the day in 2014 that Roy committed suicide by hooking up carbon monoxide gas to the cab of his truck, Carter stayed on the phone with him and, at one point, told him to "get back in" to the truck.
"There is not one day I do not mourn the loss of my beloved son," Roy's mother said in a statement that prosecutor Maryclare Flynn read on Thursday.
Flynn asked the judge for a sentence of seven to 12 years while Carter's defense lawyer Joseph Cataldo asked for five years of supervised probation, due to Carter's history of mental health issues, lack of criminal past, and young age at the time of Roy's suicide.
"Knowing that Mr. Roy is in the truck, knowing the condition of the truck, knowing or at least having a state of mind that 15 minutes would pass, Ms. Carter takes no action," said Moniz told the court before finding Carter guilty of involuntary manslaughter in June.
The unexpected manslaughter ruling caused waves in legal communities, with many legal experts arguing that it could set precedent for many future cases in which people tell others to kill themselves.
Daniel Medwed, a law and criminal justice professor at Northeastern University, told Business Insider on Thursday before the sentencing that it was unlikely that Carter would be sentenced to 20 years in prison due to her young age at the time of the crime and her history of mental illness.
He predicted a sentence of one to five years, saying that no matter what, it would be "a very difficult decision for the judge."
"Some people think she should get 20 years because what she did was just so horrible," Medwed said. "Other people think it's unfair to make an example of her because she was a troubled teenager who doesn't deserve to be sentenced to prison."
On June 16, 20-year-old Michelle Carter was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter for sending hundreds of texts encouraging her boyfriend to kill himself. Read Full Story
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