Can't even look at it until late tomorrow.
Can't even look at it until late tomorrow.
The last word on The Bradley Effect, by ptcruiser.
African American Political Pundit
ALLABOUTGEORGE.com
Bomani Jones
blac(k)ademic
blackademics.org
blacksmythe.com
Caged Lion
ebogjonson
Jack and Jill Politics
Names4Things
ripples of hope
The Dis Brimstone-Daily Pitchfork
Essential Presence
Exodus Mentality
Monroe Anderson
Professor Kim's News Notes
Racism Review
Skeptical Brotha
State of the Qusan
Temple 3
The N-Quest
The Struggle Within
three brothers and A SISTER
Too Sense
Wil's Notes
Zuky
Cobb
A Skeptical Blog
Alas, a Blog
All Facts and Opinions
American Leftist
Apathy Inc.
Blogcritics
Blunted on Reality
Brad DeLong
CenterPoint - A Centrist Weblog
Crooked Timber
Democratic Veteran
different strings
Eschaton
Everything Burns
ex-lion tamer
Fables of the reconstruction
fantastic planet
feministe
Flagrancy to Reason
Folkbum's Rambles and Rants
Group News Blog
Happy Furry Puppy Story Time
Hellblazer
Hobson's Choice
Hullabaloo
I protest.
In A Dark Time
In Search of Utopia
J-Notes
Jon Swift
Jesus' General
karmalised
Keywords
King of Zembla
LatinoPundit
LiberalOasis
Live Your Life As If It's Real
Lynne d Johnson
Mark A.R. Kleiman
MaxSpeak
Mahablog
Modulator
mousemusings weblog
Move the Crowd
MYKERU.COM
NathanNewman.org
Negrophile.
NegroPleaseDotCom
nightcrawler
Not Geniuses
Oliver Willis
Orcinus
YBLOG
Pacific Views
Pandagon
Peevish
Plucky Punk's Happy Land
Political Animal
Ray Garraud
Resource.full
Rook's Rant
Sadly, No!
Shadow of the Hegemon
Suburban Guerrilla
Talking Points Memo
TalkLeft
TBOGG
Technically Speaking
The Funny Farm
The Last Nerve
The Village Gate
The Storm
thoughts on the eve of the apocalypse
thousand yard glare
Tomato Observer
TOPDOG08.COM
Totalitarianism Today
Uppity-Negro.com
veiled4allah
Wampum
Waveflux
William Dipini
Whom Gods Destroy
XX
( a burst of light }
Technically Speaking
Moore's Lore
etc.
Zenpundit
Dog of Flanders
Suburban Blight
baldilocks
Scott at blogspot
Daniel W. Drezner
dcthornton.com
Foreign Dispatches
Real Clear Politics
Alpha Patriot
Library of Congress African American Odyssey
The African American Registry
Library of Congress African and Middle Eastern Reading Room
The Zora Neale Hurston Plays
The History of Jim Crow
PBS African-American World
Breaking the Silence - The Transatlantic Slave Trade
Human Trafficking
Temple of Democracy
Afro-Louisiana History and Slave Genealogy
UNC -North American Slave Narratives
UNC - The Church in the Southern Black Community
The Association for the Study of African American Life and History
Office of Civil Rights Reading Room
The Story of Africa
Little Rock Central High School In The News
Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Newsvine
Furl
Google
Yahoo
You were the first one to alert me to this story
So, I thought I should give you an update:
http://news.aol.com/story/_a/town-shuns-family-over-hoax-suicide/20071207071409990001?ncid=NWS00010000000001
Town Shuns Family Over Hoax, Suicide
Residents of the middle-class subdivision have turned against the neighbor, Lori Drew, and her family, demanding the Drews move out. In interviews, they have warned darkly that someone might be tempted to "take matters into their own hands."
"It's like they used to do in the 1700s and 1800s. If you wronged a community, you were basically shunned. That's basically what happened to her," said Trever Buckles, a 40-year-old who lives next door to the Drews.
Drew became an outcast after she participated in a hoax in which a fictional teenager by the name of "Josh Evans" exchanged online messages with 13-year-old Megan Meier. Megan received cruel messages from Josh that apparently drove her to hang herself in her closet in 2006.
Through her lawyer, Drew, a mother of two in her 40s, has denied saying hurtful things to the girl over the Internet, and prosecutors have said they found no grounds for charges against the woman. Nevertheless, the community reaction has been vengeful and the pressure on the Drews intense.
More than 100 residents gathered in front of their home on a recent evening, holding candles and reciting stories about Megan.
Last December, after neighbors learned of the Internet hoax, someone threw a brick through a window in the Drew home. A few weeks ago, someone made a prank call to police reporting that there had been a shooting inside the Drews' house, prompting squad cars to arrive with sirens flashing.
Someone recently obtained the password to change the Drews' outgoing cell phone recording, and replaced it with a disturbing message. Police would not detail the content.
Clients have fled from Drew's home-based advertising business, so she had to close it. Neighbors have not seen Drew outside her home in weeks.
Death threats and ugly insults have been hurled at Drew over the Internet, where she has been portrayed as a monster who should go to prison, lose custody of her children, or worse. Her name and address have been posted online, and a Web site with satellite images of the home said the Drews should "rot in hell."
Some of the threats "really freak me out," Buckles said while standing on his front porch after dark Tuesday night. As he spoke, a car slowed and stopped in front of Drew's home. It sat there idling for a few long minutes, then sped away. Buckles said it is a common occurrence.
"I just really hope that no one comes out here and does something insane," Buckles said. "If they do, I hope they get the right house."
Sheriff's Lt. David Tiefenbrunn said patrols have been stepped up around Drew's house. "There could be individuals out there with a vigilante-type attitude that might want to take revenge," he said.
The Drews - Lori, husband Curt and two children - live in a one-story ranch. An older man at the house who described himself only as a relative said Lori Drew would not comment. He would not say if the family planned to move.
Ron and Tina Meier's home is four houses away from the Drews. The sidewalk is curved, so the neighbors can't see each other from their front doors. The breach between the once-friendly families seems beyond repair.
"I think that what they have done is so despicable, that I think it absolutely disgusts people," Tina Meier said. "I can't take one ounce of energy worrying about who does not like Lori Drew or who hates Lori Drew. I could not care less."
Just a year ago, Waterford Crystal Drive was the kind of quiet suburban street where joggers waved hello while kids played in their front yards. Lately the road has been choked with TV news trucks, and neighbors hustle inside to avoid questions.
The row of brick-facade homes, with basketball nets and American flags out front, was carved out of the woods and pastures in the mid-1990s. Between rooftops, residents can see the neon signs of the strip mall restaurants near a highway that carries commuters some 35 miles to jobs in downtown St. Louis.
The subdivision and those surrounding it have street names evoking the good life, from Quaint Cottage Drive to Country Squire Circle.
The Drews used to fit in just fine, said John McIntyre, who described Lori Drew as an intensely social woman who never hesitated to stop and talk. She and Curt came over to McIntyre's home to look at his glassed-in porch because they were thinking of adding their own, he said.
McIntyre fondly remembered another guest - Megan. She came across the street to baby-sit McIntyre's 4-year-old daughter Genna and arrived with a clipboard and notes, determined to do the job right. He said the activity was good for Megan, who suffered from depression for years.
"She was a good kid," McIntyre said.
Megan became friends with the Drews' young daughter and the girls remained close for years, according to a report provided by prosecutors. But the girls had a falling-out in 2006.
A teenage employee of Drew's named Ashley said she created the "Josh" account on MySpace after a brainstorming session with Drew and her daughter, according to a prosecutor's report. Drew said the girls approached her with the idea, and she told them only to send polite messages to Megan.
Ashley sent Megan many of the messages from "Josh," and Lori Drew was aware of them, prosecutors said.
On Oct. 16, 2006, there was a heated online exchange between Megan and Ashley, who was posing as Josh. A few other MySpace users joined in, calling Megan names. It ended when "Josh" said the world would be better off without Megan.
Tina Meier said her daughter went to her room, crying and upset. About 20 minutes later, Megan was found hanging from a belt tied around her neck.
Drew's attorney Jim Briscoe said on NBC on Tuesday that Drew "absolutely, 100 percent" had nothing to do with the negative comments posted online about Megan and wasn't aware of them until after the girl took her life.
Excellent.
Excellent.