A sad story

What a sad indictment on an element of society who not only urges a troubled teen to suicide, but then horribly takes images of the deceased once done. I apologise for the sad nature of the message today but am truly saddened by a seeming lust for sensationalism and morbid entertainment to people who actually enjoy reveling in the tragedy of others. It is a real shame we cannot legislate against stupidity. Whilst I certainly do not wish some horrible fate for those that urged this boy to die, I hope that one day they privately come to realise what they participated in has caused pain and anguish and feel a profound remorse for their actions.

The story and pictures were from Ninemsn.com.au


Cop just centimetres from saving troubled teen

06:00 AEST Fri Jan 16 2009
By ninemsn staff

A British police officer has told how his efforts to save a teenager from leaping off a shopping centre car park were dashed by onlookers urging the troubled boy to jump.

Detective Inspector Barry Thacker was just centimetres from pulling Shaun Dykes away from the ledge before one last heckle caused Dykes to jump to his death 18m below.

The 17-year-old boy spent an hour and a half talking to the trained negotiator on the top level of a Westfield shopping centre carpark in the town of Derby on September 27 last year.

Detective Inspector Thacker yesterday told an inquest into Dykes's death that a crowd gathered below the ledge and started hurling abuse at the teen and urging him to kill himself, Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper reports.

"Shaun was engaging with us but once the shouts came up he would disengage, close his eyes and count down to ten," Detective Inspector Thacker told the inquest.

"The shouts were things like 'Jump', 'Get on with it' and 'Come on — stop wasting time'."

The negotiator told of how he nearly got Dykes to come down but one last taunt was the final straw.

"I had been sat with my arms out towards Shaun — he bent down to reach down to my hand when there was a shout of 'You're wasting taxpayers' money'," Thacker said.

"He stood up, said 'It's gone too far', and started counting down."

Detective Inspector Thacker said he and another officer then tried to get the boy to re-engage but he said "No" and leapt off the building.

The teen died instantly from severe injuries.

Newspaper reports at the time claimed that onlookers took photos of the boy's dead body.

The court heard that Dykes, from Kilburn, had split with his boyfriend just days before and had a history of depression and suicide attempts.

* If you need support or information about suicide prevention contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or SANE Helpline on 1800 18 SANE (7263).



Comments

Goldenrod said…
Crowd mentality at its 'finest', Craig. I'm sure that many of those in the crowd, including some of the louder hecklers, felt remorse afterwards. However, there would have been a few -- same mentality as those who gawk at accident scenes -- who would have gotten a morbid sense of satisfaction from the whole event. That these people exist in our society today is not just a sign of our times ... it has been passed down from generation to generation to generation throughout the history of mankind.
Craig Peihopa said…
absolutely true Goldenrod. I do understand the natural curiosity of people but to urge the teen on to take his life, in my mind means they were complicit in his decease. I was deeply saddened to read this story.

Popular Posts