MIAMI, Nov. 21, 2008

Webcam Streams As Fla. Teen Kills Self

Police Say College Student OD'ed In Front Of Online Audience

  • Screen grab of the website Bodybuilding.com. Authorities say members of the site were watching as a webcam recorded the suicide of a Florida college student.

    Screen grab of the website Bodybuilding.com. Authorities say members of the site were watching as a webcam recorded the suicide of a Florida college student.  ()

(AP)  A South Florida college student killed himself by overdosing on drugs in front of a live online audience as some computer users egged him on, some debated his method, and others tried to talk him out of it.

Abraham Biggs, 19, of Pembroke Pines, died Wednesday at his home from a toxic combination of opiates and benzodiazepine, a drug used to treat insomnia and depression, said Wendy Crane, an investigator with the Broward County medical examiner's office.

Authorities say the Broward Community College student is not the first person to commit suicide with a webcam rolling.

It's unclear how many people were watching through the Web site bodybuilding.com. Someone finally notified a site moderator, who pinpointed Biggs' location and called police, but they arrived too late to save him, Crane said.

Biggs, who used the screen name "CandyJunkie" on the bodybuilding Web site, started blogging about plans to kill himself 12 hours before he was found lying dead on his bed. He posted a link from bodybuilding.com to Justin.tv, a site that allows users to broadcast live videos from their webcams.

Some users who read the blog told investigators they did not take him seriously because he had threatened suicide on the site before.

But Biggs' family was infuriated that neither viewers nor the site acted sooner to save him.

"When (police) came in, the webfeed stopped. So that's 12 hours of watching," said his sister, Rosalind Biggs, who said her brother struggled with bipolar disorder. "They got hits, they got viewers, nothing happened for hours."

Rosalind Biggs described her brother as a friendly, social, outgoing person who struck up conversations with Starbucks baristas and enjoyed taking his young nieces to Chuck E. Cheese.

"It boggles the mind," she said. "We don't understand."

Authorities could not immediately verify the authenticity of a video posted online that shows a gun-wielding officer entering a bedroom where a man is lying on a bed, facing away from the camera. The officer peers over to look at the man, then begins to examine him as the camera lens is covered. The video matches Crane's description of events.

Condolences poured in to Biggs' MySpace page, where the mostly unsmiling teen is seen posing in a series of pictures with various young women. On justin.tv, his alias was "feelslikeecstacy."

In a statement, Justin.tv CEO Michael Seibel said: "We regret that this has occurred and want to respect the privacy of the broadcaster and his family during this time."

The Web site declined to release information on how many people were watching the broadcast. The entire site had 672,000 unique visitors in October.

Messages left with the bodybuilding Web site were not immediately returned Friday.

A spokesman for the Pembroke Pines police said they were investigating but declined further comment.

Crane said she knows of at least one other case in which a South Florida man shot himself in the head in front of an online audience, although she didn't know how much viewers saw. In Britain last year, a man hanged himself while chatting online.


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Add a Comment See all 21 Comments
by omnibus66 November 22, 2008 11:48 AM EST
Suicides are tragic, but certainly not unusual. As a group, Iraq veterans have one of the highest suicide rates going, but you hear almost nothing about that.

Teen suicides are also at record levels, and it is not hard to understand why. Just look around and compare the complexity and problems of todays world with that of 20 or 30 years ago.

It has to be extremely challenging, if not downright depressing to young people trying to cope with an unknown future.
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by pcreversed November 22, 2008 11:36 AM EST
The family is outraged because their loser relative was stupid enough to kill himself and video it while he was doing it. I guess it is everyone else''s responsibility to do what they would not do themselves. The family was in a position to know what that loser was going to do, no one else knew what his punk loser self was about to do. I did not watch the video and have no intention of watching it. If I were to watch it, I still would not find it my resposibility to stop him. The family should have known what he was going to do. What pathetic people he had as relatives, no wonder he killed himself
Reply to this comment
by slim1h2o November 22, 2008 10:33 AM EST

This a sad story. Is this what America has become?
So apathetic, uncaring, to the point where people not only commits suicide, but draws an audience as well?

America deserves to go to h3ll, if that''s the case.
Reply to this comment
by earache4 November 22, 2008 10:14 AM EST
We''ve gone from baby boomers, to generation X, to generation duh......
Reply to this comment
by skarrzpapi November 22, 2008 8:33 AM EST
sad sad sad...RIP...
Reply to this comment
by andrew_693 November 22, 2008 6:55 AM EST
goes to show you that people with mental problems don''t belong in a campus. All those pricks watching and encouraging him to kill himself should be all charged with not aiding him, just like a car accident. The parents should be locked up as well, they are absolute scum.
Reply to this comment
by centerfall94 November 22, 2008 2:51 AM EST
Charge all those who viewed the incident and egged him on and/or did nothing with second degree murder.

Responsibility is not a new concept.
Reply to this comment
by wl7bzh November 22, 2008 2:37 AM EST
Life without meaning?
Reply to this comment
by bobgee_1999 November 22, 2008 2:26 AM EST
Kids, if you''re pathetic and attention-starved, this is much better than walking into a school and blasting away at your classmates.
Reply to this comment
by confeddunces November 22, 2008 1:48 AM EST
That''s right Y Bother at All: nothing to discuss here. The ethical issues and outcry should rest on no one''s shoulders but the victim. In this day and age to utter any comment about the numbing cruelity of internet commentators, is a kin to attacking a sacred cow. Fine, we will get real for you, and let the devil have his day.
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by ybotheratall November 22, 2008 12:52 AM EST
Let''s ask ourselves a very honest question. Let''s take the 50s as an example. Why weren''t things like this back then? Oh, that''s right. Mom was home taking care of her family and not out with stepdad number 1 while dad and stepwife number 1 are also out, leaving child home alone. Ok, he was 19, yeah, so what? He lived at home and NO ONE saw him for over 12 hours? Who exists in a home and doesn''t notice someone not coming around after 12 hours? Detached people who are more interested in eating out and working to keep those big SUVs humming along. Try actually interacting with your family. That is just sick. For the people who watched, they are NOT accessories to ANYTHING. He could have been joking, acting, playing games, anything. Accessories, get real.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito November 22, 2008 12:45 AM EST
People can blame the online "viewers" all they want, but in the end it is the kid himself who is responsible. Yes, some people egged him on, some maliciously and some thinking it was a joke. But some others did try to dissuade him from doing it. He obviously wanted an audience for his act. And he chose not to listen to the people to tried to talk him out of it.
Reply to this comment
by winslowe1 November 22, 2008 12:17 AM EST
Our society just got a little better.
Reply to this comment
by puzzler125 November 21, 2008 11:28 PM EST
Why didn''t someone notify the police IMMEDIATELY? This is horrible and those who egged him on are accessories in his death.
Reply to this comment
by greeneyes222 November 21, 2008 11:22 PM EST
Inherit the wind. We''ve raised a sorry, sorry bunch of kids in this country.
Reply to this comment
by fush2 November 21, 2008 11:00 PM EST
so now its the viewers fault?
its not like we gave him the pills....im sorry that he died im sure that more people died that sameday
Reply to this comment
by dnamj November 21, 2008 10:29 PM EST
It''s not like this is a slow news day or anything.
Reply to this comment
by xxunknown November 21, 2008 7:44 PM EST
not too worried about Karma either.
Reply to this comment
by xxunknown November 21, 2008 7:24 PM EST
Death comes to everyone. I wonder why people fear it so much. I guess its the unknown. Fear of the unknown is always the greatest fear.

As far as moral outrage over this, I dont get it. People kill themselves everyday.
Reply to this comment
by evian_ycnan November 21, 2008 7:21 PM EST
Not thinning, chlorine
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