In 2014, 17-year-old Michelle Carter encouraged her boyfriend, Conrad Roy III, to commit suicide over text. Today, Carter seeks a verdict from the highest court in the nation.
Two weeks prior to his death, Roy exhibited signs of severe depression and debated whether he should kill himself. On numerous occasions, Carter persuaded Roy that he should go through with it -- never once seeking help for Roy or telling one of his family members.
July 12, 2014, was the night Roy and Carter planned for his death to occur. He parked in a Kmart parking lot in Fairhaven, Massachusetts and began to breathe in carbon monoxide emissions from his car. Before the situation turned fatal, Roy doubted his decision and jumped out. Carter coaxed him to “get back in” to the car and finish the job through text messages.
The case Commonwealth v. Michelle Carter began at a Massachusetts Juvenile Court in 2017, where Carter was found guilty of manslaughter because of the incriminating messages. Her defense team applied for Supreme Court review in July of this year. In a briefing with the press, Carter’s lawyers argue that her right to free speech under the First Amendment shields her from criminal responsibility because her involvement was limited to “words alone,” says the Washington Post.
However, words, not just actions, are crimes. As established in Brandenburg in 1969, speech “directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action” could be punished by the State because they “had a tendency to lead to violence.” It was Carter’s words that incited Roy’s suicide that day. Her texts and phone calls produced imminent lawless action. Had she not convinced him to get back into that car, a life may not have been taken.
In my opinion, it is fairly evident that Carter's free speech should not be protected. While she may not have threatened Roy or committed violent acts against him, her words incited his death. Carter’s actions should be treated no differently than Brandenburg, who was found guilty for his destructive speech.
A case over 200 years ago called the Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Bowen dealt with a similar issue of pressured suicide. The defendant attempted to convince the person in the prison cell next to him, Bowen, to commit suicide. In this case, the court decided that procuring a suicide “by advice or otherwise” may constitute a homicide and the defendant should be held accountable. Even if she had texted Roy rather than coercing him in person, the same should be said for Carter.
According to the famous quote stated by English author Edward Bulwer-Lytten, “the pen is mightier than the sword.” Whether there really is a pen or just text messages, words coerced a death on July 12, 2014. Michelle Carter should be held accountable because her speech effectively put Conrad Roy in his carbon monoxide-filled car that night.
The New York Times describes this unfortunate event as "a miserable glimpse at lives playing out via technology". One revolutionary aspect of this case is that it points out the huge gray area between a technology-forward generation and the law. It ultimately raises questions of where we draw the line of criminal action when it comes to the internet, social media, and text messages. With the recent HBO documentary and years of publicity on this case, hopefully it will shed some light on the outdated laws that need to be revised to fit our modern era, particularly with free speech and technology.