Florida teen Tovonna Holton took her own life
after a nude video of her was shared without her permission on Snapchat.
(Photo: Facebook)
A family in Tampa expected to be celebrating the
completion of 15-year-old Tovonna Holton’s freshman year at Wiregrass Ranch
High School, but instead they’re preparing her funeral — and it’s all because
of cyberbullying.
The teen used her mother’s handgun to take her
own life this past Sunday after finding out that friends had allegedly filmed
her taking a shower and posted it to Snapchat without her permission, according
a report by Tampa news channel WFLA. “I said, ‘My baby! My baby!’” a visibly
distraught Levon Holton-Teamer, Holton’s mother, recalled through tears in a
video for WFLA. “I couldn’t get in the bathroom … so I tried to get in, and I
look down. I seen a puddle of blood.” Holton-Teamer told the station that she
tried to save her daughter by applying pressure to her head before dialing 911.
The grieving mother added that she had gone to
the school repeatedly to report Holton’s ongoing bullying, but “wasn’t always
satisfied with the responses she got.” She was thinking of pulling her daughter
out of the school before Sunday’s tragedy occurred.
A more recent report by the Daily Beast claims
that it was actually Holton’s ex-boyfriend who shared the nude video on Twitter
in an act of revenge. Holton’s “longtime pal” Christian Coyle-Watts told the
publication that the couple had broken up Sunday morning after a series of
fights and that “Tovonna’s Snapchat recording was meant to be a “body
appreciation” post before the ex-boyfriend allegedly published it.”
It’s unclear which report is correct, but WFLA
says that the case is currently under investigation by the sheriff’s
department.
Suicide due to cyberbullying is sadly not
uncommon. According to DoSomething.org — “one of the largest global orgs for
young people and social change” — victims of bullying are two to nine times
more likely to commit suicide than average kids, and almost 43 percent report
they’ve been bullied online. Most shockingly, 90 percent of teens who have
witnessed cyberbullying say they’ve simply ignored it.
The personal tales of teens who have killed
themselves because of cyberbullying are almost too numerous to keep up with.
This month, 15-year-old Shania Sechrist hanged herself in her Pennsylvania
family home after being harassed on Facebook and through text messages. In
January, David Molak, a high school sophomore in San Antonio committed suicide
after being relentlessly bullied, primarily on Instagram and through texting.
According to Heavy.com, the bullies were actually threatening to kill him. One
message read, “We’re going to put him six feet under.” His tormenters were not
prosecuted because of insufficient evidence.
Some of the most high-profile cases of teens
committing suicide after being bullied online include Amanda Todd, who posted a
now-famous video to YouTube about her abuse — most notably, a Facebook profile
her tormentor created featuring a topless photo of her — before hanging herself
a month before her 16th birthday. Tyler Clementi was an 18-year-old student at
Rutgers University when he jumped off the George Washington Bridge in 2010.
Clementi’s roommate had outed the teen as gay by secretly filming him kissing
another man and posting it to Twitter.
The list goes on and on.
But Nancy Lublin, founder and CEO of the Crisis
Text Line, says social media isn’t the problem, people are. “That was a very,
very bad judgment call by her friends,” says Lublin. “Social media companies can
be good agents in these situations by (a) providing an easy flagging system so
that issues can be caught quickly and (b) partnering with orgs like us. For
example, we work with After School, YouTube, and others to help provide a
custom in-platform solution.”
So what can we do to prevent these senseless
deaths — and curb the off-the-rails phenomenon of cyberbullying? “It’s vital
that parents actively participate in their children’s digital life to help them
stay safe online,” warns a spokesperson for the U.K.’s National Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Children. “The NSPCC’s Net Aware guide gives parents
the support, advice, and information they need to have the right kind of
conversations about the online world.”
No comments:
Post a Comment