That friend was Ariana.

He told me that he was really sick and that his mom had just left and that he wanted her to come back.

Ariana immediately got in touch with Conrad’s parents who brought him to the hospital.

He told me, “Mom, I will never do that again.

” He was sorry, and I was sorry as well that he felt that way.

The fact that he wanted you to call his mother, what does that say to you? It just says that he was calling out for help, that he didn’t actually mean what he was doing, but he really needed help and that this was the only way he kind of thought that he would really get help.

And that help seemed to be working.

He actually was getting a lot better.

He told me about how he was going out and he was going to like, you know, the high school parties and just hanging out with everybody.

I was like, “That’s amazing.

” Michelle Carter was another friend of Conrads.

They met in 2012 while both were vacationing in Florida.

Conrad and his sisters were visiting relatives who happened to know Michelle.

How would you describe Michelle? Friendly.

Yeah, she’s really friendly.

She always made Conrad laugh.

As it turned out, Michelle lived just a few towns over from the Roy in Massachusetts.

And the relationship continued after the vacation.

But while Michelle called Conrad her boyfriend, his family says the two rarely saw each other.

And like so many teens, their interactions were mostly over text messages.

Had your son ever mentioned Michelle Carter? Yes.

After they met in Florida? I met her 2013 at his baseball game and that was the only time I ever met her.

Second time was at his week.

Michelle and Conrad shared something in common that Lynn did not know.

Michelle had her own struggles, including an eating disorder, and both teens at times took anti-depressants.

You know, probably the interaction was they both had their issues.

Softball coach Ed McFarland has known Michelle Carter and her family for a decade.

The Michelle he knows is an ideal teammate.

I’ve never seen her do a mean thing.

I’ve never seen her be mean.

Michelle’s high school yearbook paints a picture of an active, well-liked student, one voted class clown, and most likely to brighten your day.

But that would not be how her actions would be described on the last day of Conrad’s life.

That day started out seemingly happy for Conrad, spending time with his family.

That morning on the 12th, what was his mood like? It was fine.

He wanted to, you know, go to the beach with the girls.

While there, Camden at one point noticed her brother sitting alone texting.

Did you know who he was texting with? No.

Now you think he was texting with Michelle Carter? Yeah.

But you didn’t know that at the time.

And what was his demeanor? I don’t know.

He I don’t know.

He kind of seemed like anxious like when he was like texting.

Conrad then took his sisters out for ice cream where his mood seemed to lift.

I mean, when you think back on that, would you have ever guessed there was anything wrong that afternoon? After going home, Conrad left at about 6:00 pm telling his mother he was going to see a friend.

And I asked him if he was going to be back for dinner, and he said he didn’t think so.

And that was the last words that he spoke to me.

It was July 12th, 2014, the heart of summer in New England.

Conrad Roy had headed out in his pickup truck around 6:00 pm As the evening passed, Lynn checked to see when he’d be home.

And I texted him, I don’t know, before I went to bed, maybe around 10:30, 11.

And then I texted him again in the middle of the night.

Conrad didn’t respond.

Still, Lynn figured everything was okay.

She believed he had beaten back much of his anxieties.

That night, Conrad’s sister, Camden, unexpectedly heard from Michelle Carter, that 17-year-old who had battled her own mental health issues and lived about an hour away.

How surprised were you that you suddenly got a text from Michelle? And I thought she was just like just like his friend.

And but in the text she said like we’re boyfriend and girlfriend now.

And I was just like I looked at my mom I was like they are whether teenage love or something else.

Michelle was sending out the word.

Had anyone heard from Conrad Roy? And what did she text you exactly? She was like um hey Camden like do you know where your brother is? Was that unusual for him not to come home? Oh yeah, absolutely.

That was not like him at all.

It was sunrise and still not a word.

So in the morning I went to by Ariana’s house and he wasn’t there.

And so that’s when I began to search where is he? What happened? We went by dad’s house.

There’s no sign of him.

Maybe an hour later, I felt like like this um rush go through my body that I’ve never felt in my life.

And I felt at that point that he wasn’t with me.

On the afternoon of July 13th, police found him inside his pickup truck parked at the local Kmart, his cell phone right next to him.

And he died in his truck.

Carbon monoxide poisoning.

like got in the car and my mom was just like crying like the most I ever seen her cry and she was like, “He’s gone.

” And like she was just like, “Your brother’s gone.

” It still hurts just as much as it did then, doesn’t it? I will live with this forever.

Um the pain.

I don’t get why it happened.

Why did it happen? Why did it happen to him? And Michelle seemed to take Conrad’s death as hard as anyone.

Once again, a text was her choice of communication.

This time to Lynn.

I am so very sorry.

Conrad meant so much to me.

No one questioned the suicide until cops got a hold of Conrad Royy’s phone.

It would prove to be an investigation like no other.

No gun, no knife, no crucial DNA in this case.

Only this, a trail of words starting with those on the cell phone.

Messages with Michelle Carter.

And once investigators found this dialogue, they knew that there was something else up and they wanted to get to the bottom of it.

Former Boston Herald legal columnist and 48 Hours consultant Bob McGovern.

And so this thing turned from a suicide investigation into a homicide investigation.

Michelle seemed to be encouraging Conrad not to live, but to die.

Text flew between the two of them for more than a week, right up to the moment he took his own life.

I’m determined.

I’m happy to hear that.

When you get back from the beach, you got to do it.

No more thinking.

Yes.

No more thinking.

you need to just do it.

But now with Conrad Roy dead, Michelle seemed devastated, acting as if his death was a total surprise.

When it came to the funeral, she sat up close to kind of where the family area was.

I always described her seen as the grieving widow.

She was just um constantly like sobbing.

And two months later, Michelle even held a fundraiser to honor Conrad in her town of Planeville.

That fall, investigators interviewed Michelle Carter at her high school.

Did you do you think you had contact with him that day? I think so.

But Michelle’s story was riddled with holes and police weren’t buying it.

They poured through her cell phone.

Her texts ranged from urgent to ominous.

Like one sent to her friend Samantha Boardman on July 12th at 8:02 pm Just minutes after police believe Conrad killed himself.

He just called me.

I heard moaning like someone was in pain and he wouldn’t answer when I said his name.

That text was followed by another.

I think he just killed himself.

Michelle was texting her friend, but what she wasn’t doing was calling for help.

And there was at least one more text found on Conrad’s phone that now seems telling.

Only moments before he died, Michelle asked him this.

Did you delete the messages? Police would extract more than a thousand deleted text messages between Conrad and Michelle.

Some showed his fear and reluctance to take his life on the very day he died.

I don’t know.

I’m freaking out again.

I do want to, but like I’m freaking out for my family.

But even as Conrad panicked and considered abandoning his plan to die, Michelle egged him on.

She described it to her friend Samantha that September in this text.

Sam, his death is my fault.

Like honestly, I could have stopped him.

I was on the phone with him and he got out of the car because it was working and he got scared and I effing told him to get back in.

The road to justice would be complicated.

Massachusetts has no law against encouraging or assisting suicide.

And Michelle was miles away when Conrad died.

People don’t realize in our generation texting does a lot.

It’s like having the person right there in front of you when you’re texting somebody.

And the Supreme Court of Massachusetts seems to agree.

In the summer of 2016, the court ruled that even though Michelle was an hour away when Conrad Roy died, she had a virtual presence that night in that pickup truck.

It’s a controversial legal theory born out of a digital world.

And so nearly 3 years later, Michelle Carter will stay on trial in this courtroom for involuntary manslaughter.

Michelle’s attorneys, fearing how the text would play, advised her to wave her right to a jury trial.

She put her fate in the hands of a veteran judge, Lawrence Monz.

Are you doing that of your own free will, known only involuntarily? Yes.

See more of Michelle Carter’s texts to Conrad Roy on Facebook at 48 hours.

She assisted and devised and advised and planned his suicide.

Inside this Massachusetts courtroom, Michelle Carter, now 20 years old, looks more like a prep school student than a criminal defendant.

And on July 12th, 2014, as his truck was filling with carbon monoxide, he was scared.

He got out.

It was the defendant on the other end of the phone who ordered him back in, then listened for 20 minutes as he cried in pain, took his last breath, and died.

The alleged weapon in this case, Michelle Carter’s own words.

What she did in theory, according to prosecutors, is she recklessly caused Conrad Royy’s death.

The state’s case revolves around Michelle’s chilling text messages to Conrad as he was apparently having second thoughts the day he took his life.

The defendant texted Conrad, “You can’t think about it.

You just have to do it.

You said you were going to do it.

I don’t get why you aren’t.

” And then there was this.

10 days before he died, Michelle sent him this text message assuring him not to worry about his family’s feelings.

Yeah, they’ll probably blame themselves for a while, but they will get over it and learn to accept it.

A notion that baffles and upsets Conrad’s mother.

I think she needs to be uh held responsible for her actions cuz she knew exactly what she was doing.

Linroy testified that on the last day of his life, Conrad was in a good frame of mind.

He was eating tortilla chips and guacamole on the way to the beach.

In um July of 2014, did he ever mention he wanted to harm himself? No.

I knew he was a little depressed, but I thought he was he was doing great.

But prosecutors contend that Michelle and her incessant texting had immense influence over Conrad.

Even though Michelle was more than 30 miles away from him when he took his life, that her virtual presence caused him to do it.

She helped him devise a plan to kill himself using a combustion engine to poison himself with carbon monoxide gas.

Michelle sent Conrad this text message.

I’m not going to sleep until you are in the car with a generator on.

Your honor, this case is a suicide case.

It is not a homicide.

But defense attorney Joseph Cataldo painted a very different picture.

The evidence of the texting is overwhelming that Conrad Roy was on this path to take his own life for years.

Michelle Kata was not present.

Michelle Kata had been texting with him.

She did not physically see this individual for over one year.

The defense brings up Conrad’s acetaminophen overdose when he was 17 and claims he had been suicidal for years, in part because of his parents’ divorce and he had a contentious relationship with his father.

And if the judge is considering Michelle’s text messages, he should look at all the messages between the teenagers.

Even up to a month before Conrad’s death, Michelle seemed like a concerned friend, trying to help a socially awkward and emotionally fragile Conrad.

On June 19th, Michelle texts Conrad, “Are you 100% positive you’re never going to commit suicide? Be honest with me.

Do you think about doing it?” “No, I’m not.

” In other messages, she talks about wanting to take him to a therapist or a mental health hospital.

But on July 1st, 11 days before his suicide, text between Michelle and Conrad took a sinister turn.

Prosecutors let the words tell the story.

She talked him out of his doubts point by point.

She assured him that his family would understand why he did it.

She researched logistics.

Michelle had been sending Conrad suggestions on how to kill himself for weeks.

Hanging is painless and takes like a second if you do it right.

But what would drive anyone to send a text like that? Prosecutors say Michelle was desperate for friends and attention.

And she got it when she talked about her suicidal boyfriend.

Just days before he died, she sent texts to girls she wanted to be close with in an effort to get their attention and sympathy.

Lexi Elyn, please.

Pretending Conrad was missing.

Do you remember getting a message about Conrad being missing? Yes, he’s missing like they don’t know where he is.

Prosecutors say Conrad still being alive presented a problem for Michelle.

She could be exposed as a liar.

So, it was important he kill himself.

On July 12th, the night he did take his life, Conrad drove to a Kmart parking lot and texted Michelle, “Leaving now.

Okay, you can do this.

Okay, I’m almost there.

” That was the last text Conrad ever sent to anyone.

But there was also a 46-inute phone call.

Michelle called him.

She was the last person to speak with him.

After that call ended, Michelle texted her friend Samantha.

I’m going to ask you to read that text message, please, aloud.

Sam, he just called me and there was a loud noise, like a motor, and I heard moaning like some was in pain and he wouldn’t answer when I said his name.

I stayed on the phone for like 20 minutes and that’s all I heard.

Then 27 minutes later, Michelle sent Samantha another text message.

I think he just killed himself.

Prosecutors say Michelle within hours began building a virtual alibi.

Knowing that he was likely dead, she began acting like a concerned friend, sending Conrad this text message.

I’m scared.

Are you okay? I love you.

Please answer.

Michelle showed little emotion at the trial.

Her defense relies on this psychiatrist, Peter Ban, to explain her behavior, even though he was not treating Michelle at the time.

He testifies that she was involuntarily intoxicated by an anti-depressant drug she started taking 3 months earlier.

Selea, she was imshed in a delusion where she’s thinking that it’s a good thing to help him die.

But prosecutors completely dismiss that theory.

She does not tell the Roy family about being on the phone with Conrad the night before, does she? His dead body is in a car 24 hours, and she withholds that information.

Inexplicably, Michelle sent more than 80 texts to Conrad after he died.

In some, she even apologizes for not saving him.

But it wasn’t just Conrad she texted.

The prosecution is hoping the judge pays particular attention to this text that she sent to her friend Samantha a week after Conrad’s body was discovered.

They have to go through his phone and see if anyone encouraged him to do it on texts and stuff.

They read my messages with him.

I’m done.

His family will hate me and I could go to jail.

Her actions, your honor, on July 12th, 2014 caused the death of Conrad Roy.

They were reckless, and she knew it.

According to the prosecution, Michelle Carter helped put Conrad Roy in his grave.

It was a felony and she caused serious bodily harm.

According to the defense, she didn’t know what she was doing.

Good morning.

She was psychotic, delusional, involuntarily intoxicated from taking the anti-depressant Selexa.

Michelle Carta underwent an involuntary intoxication in June and July to prominent child and adolescent psychiatrist Dr.

Harold Coplowitz.

That makes no sense at all.

Though not a witness in this case, he says those drugs called SSRI are remarkably safe.

They don’t make you delusional.

They don’t make you psychotic.

And they don’t make you intoxicated.

They don’t make you drunk.

Dr.

Coplowitz believes the act of texting was more mindaltering than any drug.

And the problem with text is that it separates you.

It makes you feel less responsible.

But no amount of distance can explain her behavior, especially the prosecution’s contention that Michelle ordered Conrad back into the truck, says the doctor.

It’s very hard to understand where the man says to a friend, listen, I’m feeling pain.

I don’t want to do this.

I’m going to get out of the car.

There there’s no way to seem to make sense of the fact that someone then says a friend says get back in the car and kill yourself.

This really has a vicious and a very very malicious quality to it.

No matter how malicious, Dr.

Copit says Michelle really couldn’t have convinced Conrad to kill himself if he hadn’t already been suicidal.

So while Michelle could not force Conrad to kill himself, she could enhance his risk of killing himself.

She could encourage him to complete the act because he was already on his way.

And simultaneously, she could have screamed out for help, which might have prevented this deadly outcome.

I want to recover from this, and I feel like I haven’t recovered from it yet.

I feel like I still have a long way to go.

Clearly, these heartbreaking videos now posted on YouTube show a young man looking for that different outcome, says Dr.

Coplowitz.

You expose yourself like this.

It says, “Please help me.

I’ve created a monster out of myself past few years because of my depression.

” Sadly, Conrad Roy is not alone.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we lose approximately 4600 young people between the ages of 10 and 24 to suicide each year.

One reason is that teenagers are simply more prone to depression.

Another reason, they’re more susceptible to peer pressure.

which is why the Netflix show 13 Reasons Why has caused such an uproar.

In the show, a teenage girl dies by suicide and leaves 13 recordings to other teens whom she blames.

I think it’s one of the most dangerous programs on the air right now for the simple reason that it glamorizes suicide.

Unfortunately, suicide’s very contagious.

We know that teenagers who watch these kind of TV programs are more likely to think about suicide, are more likely to attempt suicide, are more likely to commit suicide.

It appears that Michelle Carter may have been one of those teens influenced by what she saw on TV.

Not 13 Reasons Why, but perhaps an episode of Glee.

When an actor on Glee died of an overdose in real life, the show wrote his death into the script.

Listen to the similarities between what the character Rachel says about the loss of her boyfriend and what Michelle later says about losing Conrad.

I had it all planned out and we would live happily ever after.

It’s a good plan.

Did you tell him? I didn’t have to.

He knew.

Michelle’s text to a friend after Conrad’s death is almost word for word.

I had it all planned out.

He knew, too.

I didn’t have to tell him.

He was my person.

Michelle writes the exact same line.

He was my person.

Poor her.

Her boyfriend died.

They were going to get married one day, and now she’s the grieving girlfriend.

According to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, it all boiled down to that starring role as the grieving girlfriend.

The Commonwealth’s position, your honor, is that she wanted attention.

After six days of testimony, closing arguments begin.

The defense is up first.

The evidence actually establishes that Conrad Roy caused his own death.

Joe Cataldo reminds the judge that Conrad had attempted suicide before and points to a text Conrad wrote to Michelle.

There’s nothing anyone can do for me that’s going to make me want to live.

It’s very bad to hear, but I want to let you know that truthfully.

The decision to die was Conrad’s, not Michelle’s, says Cataldo.

He created this situation, your honor.

Most importantly, Michelle was nowhere near Conrad when he killed himself.

There’s no evidence that Michelle Carter has any physical actions whatsoever in this case with Conrad Royy’s decision.

It was all of his physical activity.

But prosecutor Katie Rburn gets the last word.

Although she wasn’t physically present, she was in his ear.

She was in his mind.

She was on the phone and she was telling to him to get back in the car even though she knew he was going to die.

She absolutely knew it was wrong.

And she absolutely caused the death of this 18-year-old boy.

And I ask you to find her guilty.

Three days after Judge Monz began his deliberations, two families prepared themselves for his verdict.

Mr.

Roy.

For the Carter family, freedom is at stake.

For the Roy, it’s about justice for their son.

She instructs Mr.

Roy to get back into the truck.

Well knowing of all of the feelings that he has exchanged with her, his ambiguities, his fears, his concerns.

The judge said Carter caused a dangerous environment.

And under Massachusetts law, she had a duty to save him.

She called no one.

She did not issue a simple additional instruction.

Get out of the truck.

Miss Carter, please stand.

This court, having reviewed the evidence and applied the law there too, now finds you guilty on the indictment charging you with the involuntary manslaughter of the person Conrad Roy III.

Guilty.

This court comes a verdict that is groundbreaking in terms of recognizing the deadly power of words, but one that leaves no winners, just heartbreak.

I know we all wish that he had the opportunity to grow up into adulthood to become a tugboat captain and to enjoy his future.

Nearly seven weeks after being convicted, Michelle Carter, who is out on bail, arrives for sentencing.

Where hostile words greet her.

She could face 20 years in prison.

Please remain standing for one moment while US one.

First, Conrad’s father and sister recall a life cut short.

Not a day goes by with without him being my first thought waking up and my last thought going to bed.

Michelle Carter exploited my son’s weaknesses and used him as a pawn in her own well-being.

She has not shown any remorse.

Where was her humanity? The prosecutor reads a statement from Conrad’s mother, Lynn, who found it too difficult to speak.

I do not know where to begin.

I pray that his death will save lives someday.

Lynn wants to make it a crime to encourage suicide.

I pray that a law comes so forth so that another mother does not have to endure what I am.

I do not believe that another can go on to encourage someone to take their life and it can be okay.

The prosecution asks that Carter serve 7 to 12 years behind bars.

She has shown no remorse and in fact after Conrad’s death she sought attention and sympathy for herself.

All she had to do was say get out of the car.

Michelle Carter does not speak at sentencing, but her attorney does and ask for probation.

Miss Carter does regret what happened.

She also sent a letter to the probation department where she accepts uh responsibility.

This is a terrible, terrible tragedy and uh she very much regrets this and praise your honest judgment of leniency.

Then Michelle Carter learns her fate.

Miss Carter, please stand.

He sentences Michelle Carter to 15 months behind bars.

A sentence that does not please the defense who appealed the conviction.

We’re asking you, your honor, to stay the jail sentence until we can have our day in court.

The judge takes the request seriously, recognizing the significance of this case.

The conviction may be reversible, but the time spent in prison is not.

and then makes a stunning announcement that a grant of a stay through the Massachusetts court system only is warranted.

A stay meaning Michelle Carter would be out on probation, not in jail, while her appeal made its way through the Massachusetts courts.

It was a decision that disappointed Lyn Roy and her daughters.

We’re just going to honor his life um and do it in the most best way we can.

We want him to be proud of us.

All right.

In February of 2019, Michelle Carter’s conviction was upheld.

Miss Carter will now be taken into custody and she began serving her 15-month sentence.

Her lawyers appealed to the US Supreme Court.

The court declined to hear that appeal.

In response, her lawyers issued the following statement.

We are deeply disappointed that the Supreme Court has decided not to review Michelle Carter’s wrongful conviction.

Lyn Royy’s focus now is on changing laws.

What would you like there to be? What kind of law? I would love one in honor of him.

Uh his name Conrad’s Law.

There’s people that love me.

I have a great mom.

My son mattered.

He matters.

Will always matter.

Someone that had a family and future and mom and dad.

I will never get over him.

a beautiful ballerina.

A troubled marriage, a deadly confrontation.

She tells the neighbor, “I shot Doug in self-defense.

” Was she genuinely afraid or just trying to get her way? Underneath those white feathers, she’s an evil woman.

She’s the black swan.

48 Hours, Saturday at 10:9 central on CBS.

 

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