Thirteen- year- old Megan Meier from Missouri struck up an online
relationship with a sixteen- year- old named Josh who claimed to live in
a nearby town.
The two communicated for several weeks through MySpace. Megan
developed a strong connection to Josh; several weeks later, Josh posted
that he no longer wanted to be friends with Megan because he had heard
she was not a nice person and said that “the world would be a better
place” without her.
On October 17, 2006, Megan hung herself. Shockingly, several weeks
later, authorities revealed that Josh did not exist; he was a fictitious
person created by Lori Drew, the mother of one of Megan’s former
friends.
Bullying, a widespread and serious problem is no longer limited to
the schoolyard. In today’s society which is so technologically advanced,
cyber-bullying, which consists of posting offensive posts on social
networks, sending harassing emails or text messages, or revealing
personal information about a victim without their consent, is now the
new form of bullying.
Moreover, cyber-bullying often occurs under the cover of anonymity,
since cyber bullies usually have aliases which make it easy to hide one’s true identity.
In recent years, cyber-bulling has lead to tragic and heartrending
outcomes such as the victims committing suicide or suffering from severe
depression. In schools particularly, cyber-bullying is on the rise.
According to a report of the 2006-07 school year, the National Center of Education Statistics (NCES) revealed that:
- 8,166,000 students or 31.7 % of students between the ages 12 – 18 reported they were bullied at school
- 940,000, or about 3.7 %, reported they were the victims of cyber-bullying on or off school property
Also in recent years, cyber-bulling has increased in terms of
tragedies and awareness. As a result, most states have implemented
cyber-bulling laws, like California which makes it a misdemeanor to
impersonate someone through a website or other electronic means with the
intent to harm, intimidate, or threaten. However, the question
presented is should cyber-bullying be made a federal crime, thereby
invoking a harsher punishment?
In the case of Megan, Lori was convicted of computer fraud in 2008
but the court’s decision was overturned in 2009. In the case of Tyler
Clementi, a freshman of Rutgers University who died and was the victim
of an internet hate crime, his roommates faced charges of invasion of
privacy. These punishments lead to a public outcry for more severe
punishment for cyber-bullying.
In an attempt to put an end to the outcry, in 2009 California U.S.
Representative Linda Sanchez introduced the Megan Meier Cyber-bulling
Prevention Act which makes it a federal crime to use electronic devices
to “coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress
to a person” or to “support severe, repeated, and hostile behavior”.
However, the bill never became law.
Making
cyber-bullying a federal crime will be a difficult task, since our
legal system is based on a retributivist system where the punishment
must fit the crime. Moreover, punishment should not be implemented based
on the public outrage. Although cyber-bullying has serious
consequences, which in some cases ends in suicide, this should not
influence or cloud the judgment of a prosecutor.
Also, there is the question of society’s role in cyber-bullying. We
live in a virtually connected society, in which we are encouraged by
social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter to post our every thought
and whereabouts online, at the same time sacrificing our own privacy
for connectedness. Therefore, society needs to be mindful of the level
of responsibility required when posting on these social media sites.
Cyber-bullying is a dangerous act that has serious consequences, and
living in a society that is ruled by social media, i.e., Facebook,
MySpace, Twitter, etc., gives us an immense amount of publishing power.
However, with such an increase in power there also comes an increase in
responsibilty, a thought that may not be on the minds of the current and
upcoming social media generation.
In terms of making cyber-bullying a federal crime or having a harsher
punishment for cyber-bullies, in the words of the great philosophers
John Mills and Jeremy Bentham, “the punishment must fit the crime.”
However, if cyber-bulling leads a victim to commit suicide, a question
society needs to answer before public outrage is “what is the actual
level of influence of these cyber-bullies?”
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