Family Furious Over Teen's Online Suicide

A Florida teen used a webcam to stream his own suicide.

ByABC News
November 21, 2008, 10:31 AM

Nov. 21, 2008 — -- Four days after more than 1000 viewers watch for 12 hours as a Florida teenager committed suicide before a live webcam, his family is enraged and some online are questioning whether the young man's Internet audience was complicit.

Authorities told ABC News that 19-year-old Abraham Biggs of Pembroke Pines, Fla., was blogging on an online message board when he posted a link to Justin.tv, a live-streaming Web site where he had a camera rolling on him while he overdosed on prescription medication.

"It didn't have to be," Biggs' sister, Rosalind Biggs told The Associated Press. "They got hits, they got viewers, nothing happened for hours."

Wendy Crane, an investigator at the Broward County Medical Examiner's office told ABC News that comments on the blog eventually led one of the site's visitors to call police, who were able to find Abraham through the IP address on his computer.

But for Biggs' family, it took far too long.

"I think it is wrong, that is the first statement I want to make, somebody should have been monitoring it," the teen's father, Abraham Biggs Sr. told WPLG-TV, the ABC affiliate in Miami.

At 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, about 12 hours after he first started blogging about his death, EMS on the scene pronounced him dead.

A Facebook group entitled "Rest in Peace Abraham Biggs" has already attracted nearly 200 members: Some were friends, classmates or co-workers of Abraham, others just heard the story and felt the need to react.

Many members of the Facebook group express their sympathy for Biggs and his family. Others have even begun an online debate about whether the online viewers are to blame for Biggs' death.

One Facebook member wrote, "I was very shocked and outraged when I read this last night. No, it wasn't right for Mr. Biggs to take his own life, but it also wasn't right for nearly 1,500 people to watch this all unfold in front of their eyes and not do anything about it either."

Another member responding to criticism towards the online viewers said, "For those asking 'how could 1500 people watch and not do anything' it's the internet, who can take anybody seriously? And by the way, the only reason the cops found out WAS because someone on the internet contacted the local police."