July 3, 2009 Friday
Updated

July 3, 2009
Mum in MySpace case cleared
Drew was acquitted of more serious felony charges. The jury deadlocked on a fourth felony conspiracy count. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

LOS ANGELES - A FEDERAL judge on Thursday tentatively dismissed the conviction of a suburban mother accused of driving a love-lorn 13-year-old girl to suicide by tormenting her with a fake MySpace persona.

US District Judge George Wu said during a hearing in a Los Angeles courtroom that prosecutors' application of a federal anti-hacking statute against the Missouri woman, Lori Drew, was selective and the law was unconstitutionally vague.

In a high-profile cyber-bullying case that drew worldwide headlines, Drew was found guilty in November 2008 of three misdemeanour counts of accessing a protected computer without authorisation.

She was acquitted of more serious felony charges. The jury deadlocked on a fourth felony conspiracy count. Drew was accused of creating a fake profile on the MySpace social networking website, owned by News Corp and posing as a teenage boy to tease and humiliate 13-year-old Megan Meier, a neighbour who had quarrelled with Drew's daughter.

Megan ultimately committed suicide, hanging herself in her bedroom closet in October 2006. Drew had faced a sentence ranging from probation to three years behind bars on the three misdemeanour counts. Had the judge upheld the conviction, she had been scheduled to be sentenced at Thursday's hearing.

Instead, the judge said he was tentatively granting the defence motion to throw out the convictions and would render a final, written opinion at some point in the future.

Some legal experts have criticised the prosecution of Drew on the basis of an anti-hacking statute - the first case of its kind - saying the law was intended to punish people who break into computers to steal information.

US Attorney Thomas O'Brien, who led the prosecution of the case personally, said afterward he would wait for a final ruling before deciding whether to appeal the dismissal.

Mr O'Brien, who was accused of grandstanding when he brought the case, also left open the possibility of retrying Drew on the conspiracy charge for which the jury failed to reach a verdict.

Mr O'Brien shrugged off accusations by the defence lawyer, H. Dean Howard, that he was prosecuting Drew to further his own career. -- REUTERS

S M T W T F S
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Best viewed at 1152x864 resolution with IE 6.0 or FireFox 2.0 and above Copyright © 2008 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn No. 198402868E | Privacy Statement | Terms & Conditions